麻豆视频

Physicists take step toward a holy grail for electron spins

For decades, ferromagnetic materials have driven technologies like magnetic hard drives, magnetic random access memories and oscillators. But antiferromagnetic materials, if only they could be harnessed, hold out even greater promise: ultra-fast information transfer and communications at much higher frequencies 鈥 a 鈥渉oly grail鈥 for physicists.

Now, researchers have taken a meaningful step towards utilizing antiferromagnets for new technologies. In 鈥,鈥 published July 10 in Science, they describe their innovative approach for both detecting and controlling the motion of spins within antiferromagnets using 2D antiferromagnetic materials and tunnel junctions.

Both types of materials contain atoms that act like tiny individual magnets, each having 鈥渟pin.鈥 In a ferromagnet, all of these atomic spins are aligned, producing an external magnetic field. In an antiferromagnet, atomic spins cancel when they are added up, so no external magnetic field is produced. That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 difficult to not only detect the motions of spins within antiferromagnets but also control the motion of their spins.

Previously, detections of the spin dynamics in antiferromagnets occurred with millimeter or larger samples, 鈥渘ot something that really scales down to any kind of useful device scale,鈥 said co-corresponding author , F.R. Newman Professor of Physics in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频 and a member of the Kavli Institute at Cornell. 鈥淲hat we鈥檝e done is make micrometer-scale devices where we can see strong signals, using tunnel junctions to be able to detect the spin motions electrically 鈥 and that鈥檚 nearly a factor of 1,000 smaller than what鈥檚 been done before.鈥

Tunneling is a sort of quantum mechanical leaking of an electron through a barrier that a classical particle wouldn鈥檛 be able to get through; it鈥檚 not a direct flow of electrons across, but a penetration of an electron wave function as it goes through a barrier, Ralph said. 鈥淓lectrons can do funny things,鈥 he said, adding that tunneling is a common device used in all kinds of technologies.

When the spins in the antiferromagnet change their directions inside a tunnel junction, this changes the electrical resistance associated with the tunneling electrons, providing a way to measure the spin dynamics.

This electrical detection works at very high speeds. Most technologies are not equipped to detect at that frequency.

鈥淭his is one of our breakthroughs: that we鈥檙e using this tunneling behavior, which is this quantum mechanical electron behavior, to really read out these extremely fast oscillations,鈥 said co-corresponding author Kelly Luo, a former Presidential Postdoc/Kavli Institute Experimental Fellow at Cornell, now an assistant professor at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and 麻豆视频.

Rows of colored dots in layers, with a set of alternating layers with different colors angled above the first.
Provided A schematic of the device structure the researchers used, where CrSBr is the chemical formula of the antiferromagnet that was studied.

Their breakthroughs came in part by interweaving two fields: 2D materials and spintronics, also known as spin electronics, said lead author Thow Min Jerald Cham, M.S. 鈥21, Ph.D. 鈥24.

To help control the spins within the 2D antiferromagnet, the researchers used a mechanism known as spin-orbit torque. They passed a charge current through a material to make a spin current that can interact with the magnet, to apply a torque to the magnet and make it move.

鈥淲e were mainly searching for a way to manipulate the spins so that we could detect the 2D layers separately, and we couldn鈥檛 really distinguish which layer was doing what. Then we came up with this idea, where we could break the symmetry by twisting the layers,鈥 said Cham, who is now a postdoctoral scholar at California Institute of Technology.

With this geometry, we can use applied currents with spin-orbit torque to apply a force to just one of the spin layers and not the other, a first step for controlling the spin dynamics,鈥 Ralph said.

鈥淥ur studies shows that antiferromagnetic materials have great potential,鈥 the researchers wrote, 鈥渇or realizing nano-oscillators for high-frequency applications鈥濃 an avenue they continue to explore.

Other co-authors are Xiaoxi Huang, postdoctoral associate in Ralph鈥檚 lab; Daniel G. Chica and Xavier Roy, Columbia University; and Kenji Watanabe and Takashi Taniguchi, National Institute for Materials Science, Japan.

Support for the research included funding from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy.

This article also appeared in the .

Linda B. Glaser is news and media relations manager for the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频

More News from A&S

Man with glasses and t-shirt working on complex electronic table-top machine
Orion Smedley Lead author Thow Min Jerald Cham, M.S. 鈥21, Ph.D. 鈥24 at work in the laboratory.