Spintronics-Info: the spintronics experts

Spintronics 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 devices. Spintronics-Info, established in 2007, is the world's leading spintronics industry portal - offering a popular web publication and newsletter.

Recent Spintronic News

Researchers take a step towards spintronic and magnonic technologies operating at THz frequencies

The data storage capacity of multi-terabyte hard drives is several million megabytes, but their data transfer rates are only a few hundred megabytes per second, due to their reliance on tiny magnetic structures. The development of memory devices that operate at picosecond timescales could speed data transfer and improve access to digital information. However, ultrafast control of magnetization states in magnetically ordered systems, like hard drives, is a challenge.

Researchers from Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) and TU Dortmund University have attempted to remove speed restrictions in hard drives, by using short current pulses and spintronic effects. Instead of electrical pulses, the team used ultrashort terahertz (THz) light pulses to enable the readout of magnetic structures in just picoseconds.

Read the full story Posted: Mar 18,2025

Researchers make headway in developing organic electronics driven by circularly polarized light

Researchers from Eindhoven University of Technology, University of Cambridge, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, AMOLF and Diamond Light Source Ltd have created an organic semiconductor that forces electrons to move in a spiral pattern, which could improve the efficiency of OLED displays or power next-generation computing technologies such as spintronics and quantum computing.

The semiconductor they developed emits circularly polarized light—meaning the light carries information about the ‘left or right-handedness’ of electrons. The internal structure of most inorganic semiconductors, like silicon, is symmetrical, meaning electrons move through them without any preferred direction. But in nature, molecules often have a chiral (left- or right-handed) structure. Chirality plays an important role in biological processes like DNA formation, but it is a difficult phenomenon to harness and control in electronics.

Read the full story Posted: Mar 15,2025

UC Riverside receives $4 Million to explore how antiferromagnetic spintronics can be used in memory and computing applications

UC Riverside has received a Collaborative Research and Training Award of nearly $4 million from the UC National Laboratory Fees Research Program to explore how antiferromagnetic spintronics can be used to advantage in advanced memory and computing. The three-year project aims to advance microelectronics using antiferromagnetic materials, an ultrafast spin-based technology.

“The semiconductor microelectronics industry is looking for new materials, new phenomena, and new mechanisms to sustain technological advances,” said Jing Shi, a distinguished professor of physics and astronomy at UCR and the award’s principal investigator. “With co-principal investigators at UC San Diego, UC Davis, UCLA, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, we aim to cement the University of California’s leadership in this area and obtain extramural center and group funding in the near future.”

Read the full story Posted: Mar 13,2025

University of Manchester team reports spin polarized quantized transport via one-dimensional nanowire-graphene contacts

Researchers at the National Graphene Institute at the University of Manchester have announced milestone in the field of quantum electronics with their latest work on spin injection to graphene. The team reported ballistic injection of spin polarized carriers via one-dimensional contacts between magnetic nanowires and a high mobility graphene channel. 

The nanowire-graphene interface defines an effective constriction that confines charge carriers over a length scale smaller than that of their mean free path. This is evidenced by the observation of quantized conductance through the contacts with no applied magnetic field and a transition into the quantum Hall regime with increasing field strength. These effects occur in the absence of any constriction in the graphene itself and occur across several devices with transmission probability in the range T = 0.08 − 0.30.

Read the full story Posted: Mar 06,2025

Researchers develop graphene rolls with tunable chirality

Researchers from China's Tianjin University, Fudan University, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, National Center for Nanoscience and Technology and Tsinghua University have introduces a new technique, called the "Wax-aided immersion method," to produce controllable chiral graphene rolls. This advancement provides a novel approach to chirality modulation in two-dimensional materials and their potential applications in spintronics, laying a foundation for future developments in quantum computing and spintronic devices.

Chirality refers to the property of objects whose mirror images cannot be perfectly superimposed, much like the relationship between a person's left and right hands. Chirality is omnipresent in nature, from molecules to materials, and chiral structures often exhibit unique optical, electronic, and chemical properties. For example, the biological activity of many drug molecules differs significantly based on their chirality. In materials science, the development of chiral materials is crucial for advancing frontier technologies such as optical devices, spintronics, and quantum computing.

Read the full story Posted: Feb 27,2025

New surface-sensitive spintronic terahertz spectroscopy technique reveals unique atomic vibrations near interfaces of two materials

Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Washington have reported a new technique that could help advance the development of quantum technology. Their innovation, surface-sensitive spintronic terahertz spectroscopy (SSTS), provides an unprecedented look at how quantum materials behave at interfaces.

With the SSTS technique, a laser pulse is applied to one side of an oxide/metal sample and terahertz radiation is emitted. From the signal, the dynamics of the TO1 surface phonon is detected in the oxide at its interface with the metal. (Image by Argonne National Laboratory.)
 

“This technique allows us to study surface phonons — the collective vibrations of atoms at a material’s surface or interface between materials,” said Zhaodong Chu, a postdoctoral researcher at Argonne and first author of the study. ​“Our findings reveal striking differences between surface phonons and those in the bulk material, opening new avenues for research and applications.”

Read the full story Posted: Feb 19,2025

Graphene-based spintronics could get a boost from interaction with palladium diselenide

Researchers from ICN2, ICMAB-CSIC and the Bulgarian Academy of Science have shown how the interaction with palladium diselenide (PdSe₂) can modify and enhance graphene’s spintronic performance. The team's finding improve existing understanding of spin dynamics in graphene-based van der Waals heterostructures and could be key for developing more efficient computing devices.

Van der Waals heterostructures are materials formed by combining layers of different ultra-thin materials stacked on top of each other. In recent years, these structures have proven to be very useful for studying and understanding unusual physical phenomena, making them promising candidates for the development of new technologies. The new study analyzed the interactions that occur in a graphene and palladium diselenide (PdSe₂) heterostructure. The team stresses: "Our results showed that PdSe₂ can induce significant changes in the spin transport properties and dynamics of graphene, providing new possibilities for controlling information-carrying spin currents”. These findings constitute an important step forward in elucidating spin physics in van der Waals heterostructures and could allow for spin-logic devices in the future.

Read the full story Posted: Feb 12,2025

Researchers take step forward in controlling nanomagnetic materials using light and magnetism

Tohoku University researchers have observed an opto-magnetic torque approximately five times more efficient than in conventional magnets. This breakthrough could be extremely beneficial for the development of light-based spin memory and storage technologies.

Opto-magnetic torque is a method which can generate force on magnets, which can be used to change the direction of magnets by light more efficiently. By creating alloy nanofilms with up to 70% platinum dissolved in cobalt, the team discovered that the unique relativistic quantum mechanical effects of platinum significantly boost the magnetic torque.

Read the full story Posted: Feb 09,2025

Researchers introduce a multiferroic material that can function up to 160°C

While most multiferroics can't operate above room temperature, a team of researchers at Tohoku University demonstrated that terbium oxide Tb2(MoO4)3 works as a multiferroic even at 160°C.

A material that loses its functionality due to heat (from the environment or generated by the device itself) has limited practical applications. This is the major Achilles heel of multiferroics—materials that possess close coupling between magnetism and ferroelectricity. This coupling makes multiferroics an attractive area of research, despite that weakness.

Read the full story Posted: Feb 01,2025

Researchers observe quantum spin pumping at room temperature

A joint research team, led by Professor Jeong Myung-hwa from Sogang University and Professors Lee Kyung-jin and Kim Gap-jin from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), has captured, for the first time, the phenomenon of quantum mechanical spin pumping occurring at room temperature.

With charge current,  as current flows, electrons collide with atoms inside the material, generating heat and increasing energy consumption. This lowers the efficiency of current generation. To address this, researchers worldwide are conducting studies on creating electronic devices using spin current. The research team focused on the spin pumping phenomenon where spin moves from a ferromagnet to a non-magnetic material due to precession.

Read the full story Posted: Jan 30,2025