Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jun'ichi Ieda is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jun'ichi Ieda.


Nature Materials | 2010

Spin Seebeck insulator

Ken-ichi Uchida; Jiang Xiao; Hiroto Adachi; Jun-ichiro Ohe; Saburo Takahashi; Jun'ichi Ieda; Takeshi Ota; Y. Kajiwara; H. Umezawa; H. Kawai; Gerrit E. W. Bauer; Sadamichi Maekawa; Eiji Saitoh

Thermoelectric generation is an essential function in future energy-saving technologies. However, it has so far been an exclusive feature of electric conductors, a situation which limits its application; conduction electrons are often problematic in the thermal design of devices. Here we report electric voltage generation from heat flowing in an insulator. We reveal that, despite the absence of conduction electrons, the magnetic insulator LaY(2)Fe(5)O(12) can convert a heat flow into a spin voltage. Attached Pt films can then transform this spin voltage into an electric voltage as a result of the inverse spin Hall effect. The experimental results require us to introduce a thermally activated interface spin exchange between LaY(2)Fe(5)O(12) and Pt. Our findings extend the range of potential materials for thermoelectric applications and provide a crucial piece of information for understanding the physics of the spin Seebeck effect.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

Inverse spin-Hall effect induced by spin pumping in metallic system

Kazuya Ando; Saburo Takahashi; Jun'ichi Ieda; Y. Kajiwara; Hiroyasu Nakayama; T. Yoshino; Kazuya Harii; Y. Fujikawa; M. Matsuo; Sadamichi Maekawa; Eiji Saitoh

The inverse spin-Hall effect (ISHE) induced by the spin pumping has been investigated systematically in simple ferromagnetic/paramagnetic bilayer systems. The spin pumping driven by ferromagnetic resonance injects a spin current into the paramagnetic layer, which gives rise to an electromotive force transverse to the spin current using the ISHE in the paramagnetic layer. In a Ni81Fe19/Pt film, we found an electromotive force perpendicular to the applied magnetic field at the ferromagnetic resonance condition. The spectral shape of the electromotive force is well reproduced using a simple Lorentz function, indicating that the electromotive force is due to the ISHE induced by the spin pumping; extrinsic magnetogalvanic effects are eliminated in this measurement. The electromotive force varies systematically by changing the microwave power, magnetic-field angle, and film size, being consistent with the prediction based on the Landau–Lifshitz–Gilbert equation combined with the models of the ISHE and spin pump...


Nature Materials | 2011

Electrically tunable spin injector free from the impedance mismatch problem

Kazuya Ando; Saburo Takahashi; Jun'ichi Ieda; H. Kurebayashi; T. Trypiniotis; C. H. W. Barnes; Sadamichi Maekawa; Eiji Saitoh

Injection of spin currents into solids is crucial for exploring spin physics and spintronics. There has been significant progress in recent years in spin injection into high-resistivity materials, for example, semiconductors and organic materials, which uses tunnel barriers to circumvent the impedance mismatch problem; the impedance mismatch between ferromagnetic metals and high-resistivity materials drastically limits the spin-injection efficiency. However, because of this problem, there is no route for spin injection into these materials through low-resistivity interfaces, that is, Ohmic contacts, even though this promises an easy and versatile pathway for spin injection without the need for growing high-quality tunnel barriers. Here we show experimental evidence that spin pumping enables spin injection free from this condition; room-temperature spin injection into GaAs from Ni(81)Fe(19) through an Ohmic contact is demonstrated through dynamical spin exchange. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this exchange can be controlled electrically by applying a bias voltage across a Ni(81)Fe(19)/GaAs interface, enabling electric tuning of the spin-pumping efficiency.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Exact Analysis of Soliton Dynamics in Spinor Bose-Einstein Condensates

Jun'ichi Ieda; Takahiko Miyakawa; Miki Wadati

We propose an integrable model of a multicomponent spinor Bose-Einstein condensate in one dimension, which allows an exact description of the dynamics of bright solitons with spin degrees of freedom. We consider specifically an atomic condensate in the F=1 hyperfine state confined by an optical dipole trap. When the mean-field interaction is attractive (c(0)<0) and the spin-exchange interaction of a spinor condensate is ferromagnetic (c(2)<0), we prove that the system possesses a completely integrable point leading to the existence of multiple bright solitons. By applying results from the inverse scattering method, we analyze a collision law for two-soliton solutions and find that the dynamics can be explained in terms of the spin precession.


Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2006

Dark Solitons in F=1 Spinor Bose–Einstein Condensate

Masaru Uchiyama; Jun'ichi Ieda; Miki Wadati

We study dark soliton solutions of a multi-component Gross–Pitaevskii equation for hyperfine spin F =1 spinor Bose–Einstein condensate. The interactions are supposed to be inter-atomic repulsive an...


Journal of the Physical Society of Japan | 2013

Spin Current: Experimental and Theoretical Aspects

Sadamichi Maekawa; Hiroto Adachi; Ken-ichi Uchida; Jun'ichi Ieda; Eiji Saitoh

The flow of electron spin, the so-called “spin current”, is a key concept in the recent progress in spintronics. When the spin current interacts with the magnetic moment in a ferromagnetic metal, the angular momentum and energy conservations give rise to the spin transfer torque and spinmotive force, respectively. When it is injected into a non-magnetic metal attached to a ferromagnet, the electric current is induced through the spin-charge conversion mechanism (inverse spin Hall effect). The generation and manipulation of the spin current and a variety of novel phenomena given by the spin current, including the spin Seebeck effect and spinmotive force, are discussed.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Effects of mechanical rotation on spin currents.

Mamoru Matsuo; Jun'ichi Ieda; Eiji Saitoh; Sadamichi Maekawa

We study the Pauli-Schrödinger equation in a uniformly rotating frame of reference to describe a coupling of spins and mechanical rotations. The explicit form of the spin-orbit interaction (SOI) with the inertial effects due to the mechanical rotation is presented. We derive equations of motion for a wave packet of electrons in two-dimensional planes subject to the SOI. The solution is a superposition of two cyclotron motions with different frequencies and a circular spin current is created by the mechanical rotation. The magnitude of the spin current is linearly proportional to the lower cyclotron frequency.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2011

Spin-dependent inertial force and spin current in accelerating systems

Mamoru Matsuo; Jun'ichi Ieda; Eiji Saitoh; Sadamichi Maekawa

The spin-dependent inertial force in an accelerating system under the presence of electromagnetic fields is derived from the generally covariant Dirac equation. Spin currents are evaluated by the force up to the lowest order of the spin-orbit coupling in both ballistic and diffusive regimes. We give an interpretation of the inertial effect of linear acceleration on an electron as an effective electric field and show that mechanical vibration in a high frequency resonator can create a spin current via the spin-orbit interaction augmented by the linear acceleration.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Continuous Generation of Spinmotive Force in a Patterned Ferromagnetic Film

Yuta Yamane; Toshu An; Kazuya Harii; Jun-ichiro Ohe; Jun'ichi Ieda; S. E. Barnes; Eiji Saitoh; Sadamichi Maekawa

We study, both experimentally and theoretically, the generation of a dc spinmotive force. By exciting a ferromagnetic resonance of a comb-shaped ferromagnetic thin film, a continuous spinmotive force is generated. Experimental results are well reproduced by theoretical calculations, offering a quantitative and microscopic understanding of this spinmotive force.


Physical Review B | 2013

Mechanical generation of spin current by spin-rotation coupling

Mamoru Matsuo; Jun'ichi Ieda; Kazuya Harii; Eiji Saitoh; Sadamichi Maekawa

Spin-rotation coupling, which is responsible for angular momentum conversion between the electron spin and rotational deformations of elastic media, is exploited for generating spin current. This method requires neither magnetic moments nor spin-orbit interaction. The spin current generated in nonmagnets is calculated in the presence of surface acoustic waves. We solve the spin diffusion equation, extended to include spin-rotation coupling, and find that larger spin currents can be obtained in materials with longer spin lifetimes. Spin accumulation induced on the surface is predicted to be detectable by time-resolved Kerr spectroscopy.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jun'ichi Ieda's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sadamichi Maekawa

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mamoru Matsuo

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hiroyuki Chudo

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masao Ono

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge