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.