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New
Materials for Making “Spintronic” Devices
Pushing the development
of electronics beyond the limits of electric charge
April 25, 2007
L
to R: Alexei Tsvelik, Dmitri Kharzeev, Igor Zaliznyak.
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An interdisciplinary group
of scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven
National Laboratory has devised methods to make a new class of
electronic devices based on a property of electrons known as
“spin,” rather than merely their electric charge.
This approach, dubbed spintronics, could open the way to
increasing dramatically the productivity of electronic devices
operating at the nanoscale — on the order of billionths of
a meter. The Brookhaven scientists have filed a U.S. provisional
patent application for their invention, which is now available
for licensing.
“This development can
open the way for the use of spintronics in practical room
temperature devices, an exciting prospect,” said DOE Under
Secretary for Science Raymond L. Orbach. “The interplay
between outstanding facilities and laboratory researchers is a
root cause for this achievement, and a direct consequence of the
collaborative transformational research that takes place in our
DOE laboratories.”
In the field of electronics,
devices based on manipulating electronic charges have been
rapidly shrinking and, therefore, getting more efficient, ever
since they were first developed in the middle of the last
century. “But progress in miniaturization and increasing
efficiency is approaching a fundamental technological limit
imposed by the atomic structure of matter,” said physicist
Igor Zaliznyak, lead author on the Brookhaven Lab patent
application. Once you’ve made circuits that approach the
size of a few atoms or a single atom, you simply cannot make them
any smaller.
To move beyond this limit,
Zaliznyak’s team has been exploring ways to take advantage
of an electron’s “quantum spin” in addition to
its electric charge.
You can think of spin as
somewhat analogous to the spin of a toy top, where the axis of
rotation can point in any direction. But unlike a top, which can
be slowed down, the “spinning” electron’s
rotation is a quantum property — that is, a set amount that
cannot change. By aligning the spins of multiple electrons so
they all point the same way — known as polarization —
scientists aim to create a current of spins in addition to a
current of charges.
The Brookhaven group uses
magnetism to manipulate spin in graphene, a material consisting
of flat sheets of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal pattern.
They’ve proposed ways to make materials consisting of
layers of graphene mated to magnetic and nonmagnetic layers.
These “graphene-magnet
multilayers” (GMMs) are expected to retain their properties
at room temperature, an important practical requirement for
spintronic devices. By properly arranging the magnetization of
the magnetic layer(s), they can be used to create a full spectrum
of spintronic devices, including (re-)writable microchips,
transistors, logic gates, and more. Using magnetism for spin
manipulation also opens exciting possibilities for creating
active, re-writable and re-configurable devices whose function
changes depending on the magnetization pattern written on the
magnetic medium.
“Graphene is quite
unique,” Zaliznyak says, “in that an ideally balanced
sheet is neither a conductor nor an insulator. Related to this is
the fact that electrons in graphene behave in such a way that
their mass effectively vanishes!” In other words, he
explains, they move without inertia, like rays of light or
particles accelerated to relativistic speeds — that is,
close to the speed of light.
Such relativistic particles are
studied at Brookhaven at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
(RHIC), a nuclear physics facility where scientists are trying to
understand the fundamental properties and forces of matter. RHIC
theoretical physicist Dmitri Kharzeev and condensed matter
physicist Alexei Tsvelik have collaborated with Zaliznyak to gain
a better understanding of the physics of magnetized graphene.
“Unifying the pool of
knowledge and ideas of two fields is a great advantage for
building the theoretical foundation for future devices,”
Zaliznyak said. The patent application filed by the Brookhaven
scientists, which puts graphene-magnet multilayers to work,
leverages the large amount of scientific knowledge accumulated in
both fields into developing a novel technology. Plus, the
opportunity to study relativistic particles in two dimensions —
on flat sheets of graphene — was an unexpected and useful
arena for Brookhaven’s nuclear physicists trying to
understand the properties of the matter produced at RHIC.
The patent application covers
the methods for making the graphene-magnet multilayers, methods
of using the GMMs, methods of magnetizing the GMMs, methods for
measuring spintronic “current” in GMMs, and the
spintronic devices made from GMMs.
This work was funded by the
Office of Basic Energy Sciences and the Office of Nuclear
Physics, both within the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office
of Science.
Source:
Brookhaven National Laboratory

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