Spintronics News, Resources & InformationSpintronics is the new science of computers and memory chips that are based on electron spin rather than (or in addition to) the charge (used in electronics). Spintronics is an exciting field that holds promise to build faster and more efficient computers and other devices Berkeley Labs are developing a new type of spin-resolved ARPES toolResearchers at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS) facility are developing a new type of spin-resolved ARPES (angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy) tool. This new spin-ARPES detector was specially designed for full-time use at the Advanced Light Source. It can measure spin more efficiently then previous solutions via scattering from a variety of thin-film targets (including exotic materials such as ultra thin magnetic films peppered with quantum wells and draped in graphene).
Researchers managed to control magnetic moments in grapheneGraphene is one of the leading candidates for Spintronics materials, and now researchers from Manchester University report on a new breakthrough - they managed to create elementary magnetic moments in graphene and then switch them on and off. This is the first time magnetism itself has been toggled, rather than the magnetization direction being reversed. They say this is a major breakthrough on the way towards graphene based Spintronics transistor-like devices. The new research shows that electrons in graphene condense around vacancies ("holes" in the graphene sheet created when some carbon atoms are removed) - and create small "electronic cloud". These clouds carry a spin, and the researchers managed to dissipate and then condense back those clouds. So these clouds can be used to store information in graphene. To read them, one can use an electric current, or a spin flow.
NEC and Tohoku University developed a spintronics text-search chip that cuts power reduction by 99%NEC and Tohoku's University have jointly developed a new spintronics-based logic prototype chip specifically aimed towards text search systems. Early testing suggest that this new chip has drastically reduced power consumption - 1% or even less compared to conventional systems (DRAM and CPU). This significant reduction was achieved due to the non-volatility of the spintronic circuit which only requires power to necessary circuit blocks and does not require any standby power. NEC and Tohoku developed new multi-functional CAM cells for text-search logic. The new CAM cells are able to avoid searching for long index texts when searching for short lengths of text within a large amount of index data. This was achieved by setting up combinations (patterns) of input signals that represent long texts. This enables circuits to detect when a long text is input, and to avoid any further unnecessary operations.
Manganese and Gallium Nitride given a second chance as Spintronics materialsA combination of Manganese and Gallium Nitride was once a promising spintronics material, but it was later abandoned when it was found that these two materials aren't harmonious. But now researchers from Ohio university (in collaboration with Argentinian and Spanish researchers) developed a way to incorporate a uniform layer (at least on the surface) from the materials. The researchers used the nitrogen polarity of gallium nitride (old experiments used the gallium polarity) to attach to the manganese, and they also heated the sample which prevents the manganese atoms from "floating" on the outer layer of gallium atoms and instead made the connection that created the manganese-nitrogen bond.
New technique to control nuclear spins promises highly sensitive NMR and MRIResearchers from the US DoE's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory developed a new technique for hyperpolarizing carbon-13 nuclear spins in diamond, that enhances the sensitivity of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) by many orders of magnitudes compared to available techniques.
Researchers use diamond defects for optical spin control and nanoscale temperature sensorsResearchers from the University of Chicago's Institute for Molecular Engineering developed a new technique that can full control the electronic spin of the nitrogen vacancy center (an atomic-scale defect) in diamonds. This may pave the way towards light based Spintronic quantum computers. The same team also developed a new temperature sensor that is based on manipulation of the same nitrogen vacancy center defect in diamonds. Nanoscale magnetic and electric fields sensors have already been developed, but this is the first temperature nanoscale sensor.
NVE awarded $224,000 by the NSF to develop food safety spintronics sensors
The contract is titled "Real Time Detection for Salmonella", and its goal is to develop sensors capable of faster detection of food-borne pathogens than current techniques while retaining equivalent sensitivity. The sensor could also be extensible to other biomarkers and could be envisioned as a critical point-of-care sensor in the medical industry.
Samsung to looking for global STT-MRAM research partners, offers funding and collaborationSamsung Electronics launched a new global research outreach program aimed towards STT-MRAM innovation. The Samsung Global MRAM Innovation (SGMI) is looking for colleges, universities and research labs from all over the world to explore breakthrough and innovative STT-MRAM research. Samsung invites submissions for novel ideas on STT-MRAM research - and the selected proposals will receive financial support from Samsung (around $70,000 to $150,000 for one year programs). The deadline for submission is September 28, 2013.
Spin Hall magnetoresistance discovered using an insulating magnetResearchers from Tohoku Univeristy generated a new kind of magnetoresistance in a system with an insulating magnet. They call this new phenomenon Spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR). In SMR, the current does not need to pass through a magnet. The researchers developed a system in which a normal metal is put in contact with a magnetic insulator. The resistance of the normal metal is influenced by the magnetization in the insulating magnet even though none of the charge current is able to pass through the magnet. The SMR effect is a result of spin current being able to flow from the metal into the magnetic insulator. The rate of this spin transfer depends on the magnetization direction of the insulator. The more spin current passing across the metal-insulator interface, the weaker the charge current flowing through the metal.
Researchers create magnetic graphene, to enable graphene-based spintronic devicesResearchers from Spain have managed to create magnetic graphene, basically they developed a hybrid graphene surface that behaves like a magnet. This may enable graphene-based Spintronic devices. The researchers grew a graphene sheet on a ruthernium single crystal substrate. Then they evaporated TCNQ (tetracyano-p-quinodimethane) molecules on the graphene surface. The TCNQ molecule acquired long-range magnetic order. While the graphene itself did not interact with the TCNQ molecules, it permitted a highly efficient charge transfer between the substrate (the ruthernium crystal) and the TCNQ.
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