New method gives semiconductors a magnetic boost

Researchers at the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA, University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Czech Republic's University of Chemistry and Technology have developed a method for combining magnetic elements with semiconductors. 

The team demonstrated the ability to produce semiconductor materials containing up to 50% magnetic atoms, whereas current methods are often limited to a concentration of magnetic atoms no greater than 5%. Using their process, the scientists created a library of more than 20 new materials that combined magnetic elements such as cobalt, manganese and iron with a variety of semiconductors. 

 

The researchers’ technique involves alternately stacking together atomically thin sheets of the semiconductors and self-organized layers of magnetic atoms. This layered architecture allows each component to retain its ordered arrangements and intrinsic properties while giving rise to new collective behaviors.

The study also showed that the new strategy could be used to incorporate magnetic elements into superconductors and topological insulators. In tests that included the use of atomic imaging and magnetization measurements, the researchers found evidence that the new materials made with superconductors and topological insulators maintained their exotic traits while developing new magnetic behavior.

Methods for integrating magnetism into semiconductors have been examined for many years, with only modest success so far. Current techniques involve substituting a small portion of atoms in semiconductors with magnetic atoms. However, above a critical concentration threshold of about 5%, the magnetic atoms tend to clump in a way that undermines the capacity to control the materials’ magnetic and electronic properties.

Semiconductors with controllable magnetic properties could be the basis for spintronics, which is already used in technologies such as the read heads that pull data off the hard drives in computers and other devices. Unlike conventional electronics, spintronic components don’t produce excess heat, a major barrier to cramming more power into smaller chips. By overcoming this limitation, spintronics could lead to future devices that are more powerful, compact and energy-efficient, or even ones with entirely new capabilities.

Magnetic materials produced with the new method might also serve as foundational materials for future quantum computers. Such devices are expected to complete calculations that are currently impossible, to simulate complex natural phenomena at a level that traditional computers fail to achieve, and to allow for unbreakable cybersecurity.

The team’s novel process could provide a versatile material platform for future spintronic devices that can do more than contemporary electronics, with superior energy efficiency. For example, today’s popular artificial intelligence systems consume enormous amounts of electricity and water; future computers deploying spintronics may host AI applications that are more powerful while avoiding the worrying carbon footprint and drain on vital resources.

Exotic materials that combine semiconductor or superconductor properties with magnetism could also help raise the temperature at which quantum computers operate to more practical levels — unlike current systems that require extremely cold conditions.

Deployed in basic research, new materials combining semiconductors and magnetism could help improve the understanding of fundamental forces and interactions underlying not only advanced technology but also nature itself.

Posted: Jul 29,2025 by Roni Peleg