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Spintronics

Spintronics (a portmanteau meaning spin transport electronics[1][2][3]), also known as spin electronics, is the study of the intrinsic spin of the electron and its associated magnetic moment, in addition to its fundamental electronic charge, in solid-state devices.[4] The field of spintronics concerns spin-charge coupling in metallic systems; the analogous effects in insulators fall into the field of multiferroics.

Spintronics fundamentally differs from traditional electronics in that, in addition to charge state, electron spins are used as a further degree of freedom, with implications in the efficiency of data storage and transfer. Spintronic systems are most often realised in dilute magnetic semiconductors (DMS) and Heusler alloys and are of particular interest in the field of quantum computing and neuromorphic computing.

History edit

Spintronics emerged from discoveries in the 1980s concerning spin-dependent electron transport phenomena in solid-state devices. This includes the observation of spin-polarized electron injection from a ferromagnetic metal to a normal metal by Johnson and Silsbee (1985)[5] and the discovery of giant magnetoresistance independently by Albert Fert et al.[6] and Peter Grünberg et al. (1988).[7] The origin of spintronics can be traced to the ferromagnet/superconductor tunneling experiments pioneered by Meservey and Tedrow and initial experiments on magnetic tunnel junctions by Julliere in the 1970s.[8] The use of semiconductors for spintronics began with the theoretical proposal of a spin field-effect-transistor by Datta and Das in 1990[9] and of the electric dipole spin resonance by Rashba in 1960.[10]

Theory edit

The spin of the electron is an intrinsic angular momentum that is separate from the angular momentum due to its orbital motion. The magnitude of the projection of the electron's spin along an arbitrary axis is  , implying that the electron acts as a fermion by the spin-statistics theorem. Like orbital angular momentum, the spin has an associated magnetic moment, the magnitude of which is expressed as

 .

In a solid, the spins of many electrons can act together to affect the magnetic and electronic properties of a material, for example endowing it with a permanent magnetic moment as in a ferromagnet.

In many materials, electron spins are equally present in both the up and the down state, and no transport properties are dependent on spin. A spintronic device requires generation or manipulation of a spin-polarized population of electrons, resulting in an excess of spin up or spin down electrons. The polarization of any spin dependent property X can be written as

 .

A net spin polarization can be achieved either through creating an equilibrium energy split between spin up and spin down. Methods include putting a material in a large magnetic field (Zeeman effect), the exchange energy present in a ferromagnet or forcing the system out of equilibrium. The period of time that such a non-equilibrium population can be maintained is known as the spin lifetime,  .

In a diffusive conductor, a spin diffusion length   can be defined as the distance over which a non-equilibrium spin population can propagate. Spin lifetimes of conduction electrons in metals are relatively short (typically less than 1 nanosecond). An important research area is devoted to extending this lifetime to technologically relevant timescales.

 
A plot showing a spin up, spin down, and the resulting spin polarized population of electrons. Inside a spin injector, the polarization is constant, while outside the injector, the polarization decays exponentially to zero as the spin up and down populations go to equilibrium.

The mechanisms of decay for a spin polarized population can be broadly classified as spin-flip scattering and spin dephasing. Spin-flip scattering is a process inside a solid that does not conserve spin, and can therefore switch an incoming spin up state into an outgoing spin down state. Spin dephasing is the process wherein a population of electrons with a common spin state becomes less polarized over time due to different rates of electron spin precession. In confined structures, spin dephasing can be suppressed, leading to spin lifetimes of milliseconds in semiconductor quantum dots at low temperatures.

Superconductors can enhance central effects in spintronics such as magnetoresistance effects, spin lifetimes and dissipationless spin-currents.[11][12]

The simplest method of generating a spin-polarised current in a metal is to pass the current through a ferromagnetic material. The most common applications of this effect involve giant magnetoresistance (GMR) devices. A typical GMR device consists of at least two layers of ferromagnetic materials separated by a spacer layer. When the two magnetization vectors of the ferromagnetic layers are aligned, the electrical resistance will be lower (so a higher current flows at constant voltage) than if the ferromagnetic layers are anti-aligned. This constitutes a magnetic field sensor.

Two variants of GMR have been applied in devices: (1) current-in-plane (CIP), where the electric current flows parallel to the layers and (2) current-perpendicular-to-plane (CPP), where the electric current flows in a direction perpendicular to the layers.

Other metal-based spintronics devices:

  • Tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR), where CPP transport is achieved by using quantum-mechanical tunneling of electrons through a thin insulator separating ferromagnetic layers.
  • Spin-transfer torque, where a current of spin-polarized electrons is used to control the magnetization direction of ferromagnetic electrodes in the device.
  • Spin-wave logic devices carry information in the phase. Interference and spin-wave scattering can perform logic operations.

Spintronic-logic devices edit

Non-volatile spin-logic devices to enable scaling are being extensively studied.[13] Spin-transfer, torque-based logic devices that use spins and magnets for information processing have been proposed.[14][15] These devices are part of the ITRS exploratory road map. Logic-in memory applications are already in the development stage.[16][17] A 2017 review article can be found in Materials Today.[4]

A generalized circuit theory for spintronic integrated circuits has been proposed [18] so that the physics of spin transport can be utilized by SPICE developers and subsequently by circuit and system designers for the exploration of spintronics for “beyond CMOS computing.”

Applications edit

Read heads of magnetic hard drives are based on the GMR or TMR effect.

Motorola developed a first-generation 256 kb magnetoresistive random-access memory (MRAM) based on a single magnetic tunnel junction and a single transistor that has a read/write cycle of under 50 nanoseconds.[19] Everspin has since developed a 4 Mb version.[20] Two second-generation MRAM techniques are in development: thermal-assisted switching (TAS)[21] and spin-transfer torque (STT).[22]

Another design, racetrack memory, encodes information in the direction of magnetization between domain walls of a ferromagnetic wire.

In 2012, persistent spin helices of synchronized electrons were made to persist for more than a nanosecond, a 30-fold increase over earlier efforts, and longer than the duration of a modern processor clock cycle.[23]

Semiconductor-based spintronic devices edit

Doped semiconductor materials display dilute ferromagnetism. In recent years, dilute magnetic oxides (DMOs) including ZnO based DMOs and TiO2-based DMOs have been the subject of numerous experimental and computational investigations.[24][25] Non-oxide ferromagnetic semiconductor sources (like manganese-doped gallium arsenide (Ga,Mn)As),[26] increase the interface resistance with a tunnel barrier,[27] or using hot-electron injection.[28]

Spin detection in semiconductors has been addressed with multiple techniques:

  • Faraday/Kerr rotation of transmitted/reflected photons[29]
  • Circular polarization analysis of electroluminescence[30]
  • Nonlocal spin valve (adapted from Johnson and Silsbee's work with metals)[31]
  • Ballistic spin filtering[32]

The latter technique was used to overcome the lack of spin-orbit interaction and materials issues to achieve spin transport in silicon.[33]

Because external magnetic fields (and stray fields from magnetic contacts) can cause large Hall effects and magnetoresistance in semiconductors (which mimic spin-valve effects), the only conclusive evidence of spin transport in semiconductors is demonstration of spin precession and dephasing in a magnetic field non-collinear to the injected spin orientation, called the Hanle effect.

Applications edit

Applications using spin-polarized electrical injection have shown threshold current reduction and controllable circularly polarized coherent light output.[34] Examples include semiconductor lasers. Future applications may include a spin-based transistor having advantages over MOSFET devices such as steeper sub-threshold slope.

Magnetic-tunnel transistor: The magnetic-tunnel transistor with a single base layer[35] has the following terminals:

  • Emitter (FM1): Injects spin-polarized hot electrons into the base.
  • Base (FM2): Spin-dependent scattering takes place in the base. It also serves as a spin filter.
  • Collector (GaAs): A Schottky barrier is formed at the interface. It only collects electrons that have enough energy to overcome the Schottky barrier, and when states are available in the semiconductor.

The magnetocurrent (MC) is given as:

 

And the transfer ratio (TR) is

 

MTT promises a highly spin-polarized electron source at room temperature.

Storage media edit

Antiferromagnetic storage media have been studied as an alternative to ferromagnetism,[36] especially since with antiferromagnetic material the bits can be stored as well as with ferromagnetic material. Instead of the usual definition 0 ↔ 'magnetisation upwards', 1 ↔ 'magnetisation downwards', the states can be, e.g., 0 ↔ 'vertically-alternating spin configuration' and 1 ↔ 'horizontally-alternating spin configuration'.[37]).

The main advantages of antiferromagnetic material are:

  • insensitivity to data-damaging perturbations by stray fields due to zero net external magnetization;[38]
  • no effect on near particles, implying that antiferromagnetic device elements would not magnetically disturb its neighboring elements;[38]
  • far shorter switching times (antiferromagnetic resonance frequency is in the THz range compared to GHz ferromagnetic resonance frequency);[39]
  • broad range of commonly available antiferromagnetic materials including insulators, semiconductors, semimetals, metals, and superconductors.[39]

Research is being done into how to read and write information to antiferromagnetic spintronics as their net zero magnetization makes this difficult compared to conventional ferromagnetic spintronics. In modern MRAM, detection and manipulation of ferromagnetic order by magnetic fields has largely been abandoned in favor of more efficient and scalable reading and writing by electrical current. Methods of reading and writing information by current rather than fields are also being investigated in antiferromagnets as fields are ineffective anyway. Writing methods currently being investigated in antiferromagnets are through spin-transfer torque and spin-orbit torque from the spin Hall effect and the Rashba effect. Reading information in antiferromagnets via magnetoresistance effects such as tunnel magnetoresistance is also being explored.[40]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Physics Profile: "Stu Wolf: True D! Hollywood Story"".
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  4. ^ a b Bhatti, S.; et al. (2017). "Spintronics based random access memory: a review". Materials Today. 20 (9): 530–548. doi:10.1016/j.mattod.2017.07.007.
  5. ^ Johnson, M.; Silsbee, R. H. (1985). "Interfacial charge-spin coupling: Injection and detection of spin magnetization in metals". Physical Review Letters. 55 (17): 1790–1793. Bibcode:1985PhRvL..55.1790J. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.55.1790. PMID 10031924.
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  13. ^ International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors
  14. ^ Behin-Aein, B.; Datta, D.; Salahuddin, S.; Datta, S. (2010). "Proposal for an all-spin logic device with built-in memory". Nature Nanotechnology. 5 (4): 266–270. Bibcode:2010NatNa...5..266B. doi:10.1038/nnano.2010.31. PMID 20190748.
  15. ^ Manipatruni, Sasikanth; Nikonov, Dmitri E. and Young, Ian A. (2011) [1112.2746] Circuit Theory for SPICE of Spintronic Integrated Circuits. Arxiv.org. Retrieved on 21 October 2013.
  16. ^ Crocus Partners With Starchip To Develop System-On-Chip Solutions Based on Magnetic-Logic-Unit (MLU) Technology. crocus-technology.com. 8 December 2011
  17. ^ Groundbreaking New Technology for Improving the Reliability of Spintronics Logic Integrated Circuits. Nec.com. 11 June 2012.
  18. ^ S. Manipatruni, D. E. Nikonov and I. A. Young, "Modeling and Design of Spintronic Integrated Circuits," in IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I: Regular Papers, vol. 59, no. 12, pp. 2801-2814, Dec. 2012, doi: 10.1109/TCSI.2012.2206465. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=6359950&isnumber=6359940
  19. ^ Spintronics. Sigma-Aldrich. Retrieved on 21 October 2013.
  20. ^ Everspin 30 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Everspin. Retrieved on 21 October 2013.
  21. ^ Hoberman, Barry. The Emergence of Practical MRAM 21 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine. crocustechnology.com
  22. ^ LaPedus, Mark (18 June 2009) Tower invests in Crocus, tips MRAM foundry deal. eetimes.com
  23. ^ Walser, M.; Reichl, C.; Wegscheider, W. & Salis, G. (2012). "Direct mapping of the formation of a persistent spin helix". Nature Physics. 8 (10): 757. arXiv:1209.4857. Bibcode:2012NatPh...8..757W. doi:10.1038/nphys2383. S2CID 119209785.
  24. ^ Assadi, M.H.N; Hanaor, D.A.H (2013). "Theoretical study on copper's energetics and magnetism in TiO2 polymorphs". Journal of Applied Physics. 113 (23): 233913–233913–5. arXiv:1304.1854. Bibcode:2013JAP...113w3913A. doi:10.1063/1.4811539. S2CID 94599250.
  25. ^ Ogale, S.B (2010). "Dilute doping, defects, and ferromagnetism in metal oxide systems". Advanced Materials. 22 (29): 3125–3155. Bibcode:2010AdM....22.3125O. doi:10.1002/adma.200903891. PMID 20535732. S2CID 25307693.
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  28. ^ Jiang, X.; Wang, R.; Van Dijken, S.; Shelby, R.; MacFarlane, R.; Solomon, G.; Harris, J.; Parkin, S. (2003). "Optical Detection of Hot-Electron Spin Injection into GaAs from a Magnetic Tunnel Transistor Source". Physical Review Letters. 90 (25): 256603. Bibcode:2003PhRvL..90y6603J. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.90.256603. PMID 12857153.
  29. ^ Kikkawa, J.; Awschalom, D. (1998). "Resonant Spin Amplification in n-Type GaAs". Physical Review Letters. 80 (19): 4313. Bibcode:1998PhRvL..80.4313K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.80.4313.
  30. ^ Jonker, Berend T. Polarized optical emission due to decay or recombination of spin-polarized injected carriers – US Patent 5874749 12 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Issued on 23 February 1999.
  31. ^ Lou, X.; Adelmann, C.; Crooker, S. A.; Garlid, E. S.; Zhang, J.; Reddy, K. S. M.; Flexner, S. D.; Palmstrøm, C. J.; Crowell, P. A. (2007). "Electrical detection of spin transport in lateral ferromagnet–semiconductor devices". Nature Physics. 3 (3): 197. arXiv:cond-mat/0701021. Bibcode:2007NatPh...3..197L. doi:10.1038/nphys543. S2CID 51390849.
  32. ^ Appelbaum, I.; Huang, B.; Monsma, D. J. (2007). "Electronic measurement and control of spin transport in silicon". Nature. 447 (7142): 295–298. arXiv:cond-mat/0703025. Bibcode:2007Natur.447..295A. doi:10.1038/nature05803. PMID 17507978. S2CID 4340632.
  33. ^ Žutić, I.; Fabian, J. (2007). "Spintronics: Silicon twists". Nature. 447 (7142): 268–269. Bibcode:2007Natur.447..268Z. doi:10.1038/447269a. PMID 17507969. S2CID 32830840.
  34. ^ Holub, M.; Shin, J.; Saha, D.; Bhattacharya, P. (2007). "Electrical Spin Injection and Threshold Reduction in a Semiconductor Laser". Physical Review Letters. 98 (14): 146603. Bibcode:2007PhRvL..98n6603H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.146603. PMID 17501298.
  35. ^ Van Dijken, S.; Jiang, X.; Parkin, S. S. P. (2002). "Room temperature operation of a high output current magnetic tunnel transistor". Applied Physics Letters. 80 (18): 3364. Bibcode:2002ApPhL..80.3364V. doi:10.1063/1.1474610.
  36. ^ Jungwirth, T. (28 April 2014). (PDF) (announcement of a physics colloquium at a Bavarian university). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 April 2014. Retrieved 29 April 2014.
  37. ^ This corresponds mathematically to the transition from the rotation group SO(3) to its relativistic covering, the "double group" SU(2)
  38. ^ a b Jungwirth, T.; Marti, X.; Wadley, P.; Wunderlich, J. (2016). "Antiferromagnetic spintronics". Nature Nanotechnology. Springer Nature. 11 (3): 231–241. arXiv:1509.05296. Bibcode:2016NatNa..11..231J. doi:10.1038/nnano.2016.18. ISSN 1748-3387. PMID 26936817. S2CID 5058124.
  39. ^ a b Gomonay, O.; Jungwirth, T.; Sinova, J. (21 February 2017). "Concepts of antiferromagnetic spintronics". Physica Status Solidi RRL. Wiley. 11 (4): 1700022. arXiv:1701.06556. Bibcode:2017PSSRR..1100022G. doi:10.1002/pssr.201700022. ISSN 1862-6254. S2CID 73575617.
  40. ^ Chappert, Claude; Fert, Albert; van Dau, Frédéric Nguyen (2007). "The emergence of spin electronics in data storage". Nature Materials. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 6 (11): 813–823. Bibcode:2007NatMa...6..813C. doi:10.1038/nmat2024. ISSN 1476-1122. PMID 17972936. S2CID 21075877.

Further reading edit

  • "Introduction to Spintronics". Marc Cahay, Supriyo Bandyopadhyay, CRC Press, ISBN 0-8493-3133-1
  • J. A. Gupta; R. Knobel; N. Samarth; D. D. Awschalom (29 June 2001). "Ultrafast Manipulation of Electron Spin Coherence". Science. 292 (5526): 2458–2461. Bibcode:2001Sci...292.2458G. doi:10.1126/science.1061169. PMID 11431559. S2CID 22898874.
  • Wolf, S. A.; Awschalom, DD; Buhrman, RA; Daughton, JM; von Molnár, S; Roukes, ML; Chtchelkanova, AY; Treger, DM (16 November 2001). "Spintronics: A Spin-Based Electronics Vision for the Future". Science. 294 (5546): 1488–1495. Bibcode:2001Sci...294.1488W. doi:10.1126/science.1065389. PMID 11711666. S2CID 14010432.
  • Sharma, P. (28 January 2005). "How to Create a Spin Current". Science. 307 (5709): 531–533. doi:10.1126/science.1099388. PMID 15681374. S2CID 118636399.
  • Tomasz Dietl; David D. Awschalom; Maria Kaminska; et al., eds. (2009). Spintronics. Academic Press. ISBN 9780080914213.
  • Žutić, I.; Das Sarma, S. (2004). "Spintronics: Fundamentals and applications". Reviews of Modern Physics. 76 (2): 323–410. arXiv:cond-mat/0405528. Bibcode:2004RvMP...76..323Z. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.76.323. S2CID 119398474.
  • Parkin, Stuart; Ching-Ray, Chang; Chantrell, Roy, eds. (2011). "SPIN". World Scientific. ISSN 2010-3247. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • "Spintronics Steps Forward.", University of South Florida News
  • Bader, S. D.; Parkin, S. S. P. (2010). "Spintronics". Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics. 1: 71–88. Bibcode:2010ARCMP...1...71B. doi:10.1146/annurev-conmatphys-070909-104123.

External links edit

  • 23 milestones in the history of spin compiled by Nature
  • Milestone 18: A Giant Leap for Electronics: Giant Magneto-resistance, compiled by Nature
  • Milestone 20: Information in a Spin: Datta-Das, compiled by Nature
  • Awschalom, David D.; Flatté, Michael E.; Samarth, Nitin (June 2002). "Spintronics". Scientific American. 286 (6): 66–73. Bibcode:2002SciAm.286f..66A. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0602-66. PMID 12030093.
  • Spintronics portal with news and resources
  • RaceTrack:InformationWeek (April 11, 2008) 14 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Spintronics Tutorial
  • Lecture on Spin transport by S. Datta (from Datta Das transistor)— and

spintronics, portmanteau, meaning, spin, transport, electronics, also, known, spin, electronics, study, intrinsic, spin, electron, associated, magnetic, moment, addition, fundamental, electronic, charge, solid, state, devices, field, spintronics, concerns, spi. Spintronics a portmanteau meaning spin transport electronics 1 2 3 also known as spin electronics is the study of the intrinsic spin of the electron and its associated magnetic moment in addition to its fundamental electronic charge in solid state devices 4 The field of spintronics concerns spin charge coupling in metallic systems the analogous effects in insulators fall into the field of multiferroics Spintronics fundamentally differs from traditional electronics in that in addition to charge state electron spins are used as a further degree of freedom with implications in the efficiency of data storage and transfer Spintronic systems are most often realised in dilute magnetic semiconductors DMS and Heusler alloys and are of particular interest in the field of quantum computing and neuromorphic computing Contents 1 History 2 Theory 3 Spintronic logic devices 3 1 Applications 4 Semiconductor based spintronic devices 4 1 Applications 4 2 Storage media 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editSpintronics emerged from discoveries in the 1980s concerning spin dependent electron transport phenomena in solid state devices This includes the observation of spin polarized electron injection from a ferromagnetic metal to a normal metal by Johnson and Silsbee 1985 5 and the discovery of giant magnetoresistance independently by Albert Fert et al 6 and Peter Grunberg et al 1988 7 The origin of spintronics can be traced to the ferromagnet superconductor tunneling experiments pioneered by Meservey and Tedrow and initial experiments on magnetic tunnel junctions by Julliere in the 1970s 8 The use of semiconductors for spintronics began with the theoretical proposal of a spin field effect transistor by Datta and Das in 1990 9 and of the electric dipole spin resonance by Rashba in 1960 10 Theory editMain article Spin physics The spin of the electron is an intrinsic angular momentum that is separate from the angular momentum due to its orbital motion The magnitude of the projection of the electron s spin along an arbitrary axis is 1 2 ℏ displaystyle tfrac 1 2 hbar nbsp implying that the electron acts as a fermion by the spin statistics theorem Like orbital angular momentum the spin has an associated magnetic moment the magnitude of which is expressed as m 3 2 q m e ℏ displaystyle mu tfrac sqrt 3 2 frac q m e hbar nbsp In a solid the spins of many electrons can act together to affect the magnetic and electronic properties of a material for example endowing it with a permanent magnetic moment as in a ferromagnet In many materials electron spins are equally present in both the up and the down state and no transport properties are dependent on spin A spintronic device requires generation or manipulation of a spin polarized population of electrons resulting in an excess of spin up or spin down electrons The polarization of any spin dependent property X can be written as P X X X X X displaystyle P X frac X uparrow X downarrow X uparrow X downarrow nbsp A net spin polarization can be achieved either through creating an equilibrium energy split between spin up and spin down Methods include putting a material in a large magnetic field Zeeman effect the exchange energy present in a ferromagnet or forcing the system out of equilibrium The period of time that such a non equilibrium population can be maintained is known as the spin lifetime t displaystyle tau nbsp In a diffusive conductor a spin diffusion length l displaystyle lambda nbsp can be defined as the distance over which a non equilibrium spin population can propagate Spin lifetimes of conduction electrons in metals are relatively short typically less than 1 nanosecond An important research area is devoted to extending this lifetime to technologically relevant timescales nbsp A plot showing a spin up spin down and the resulting spin polarized population of electrons Inside a spin injector the polarization is constant while outside the injector the polarization decays exponentially to zero as the spin up and down populations go to equilibrium The mechanisms of decay for a spin polarized population can be broadly classified as spin flip scattering and spin dephasing Spin flip scattering is a process inside a solid that does not conserve spin and can therefore switch an incoming spin up state into an outgoing spin down state Spin dephasing is the process wherein a population of electrons with a common spin state becomes less polarized over time due to different rates of electron spin precession In confined structures spin dephasing can be suppressed leading to spin lifetimes of milliseconds in semiconductor quantum dots at low temperatures Superconductors can enhance central effects in spintronics such as magnetoresistance effects spin lifetimes and dissipationless spin currents 11 12 The simplest method of generating a spin polarised current in a metal is to pass the current through a ferromagnetic material The most common applications of this effect involve giant magnetoresistance GMR devices A typical GMR device consists of at least two layers of ferromagnetic materials separated by a spacer layer When the two magnetization vectors of the ferromagnetic layers are aligned the electrical resistance will be lower so a higher current flows at constant voltage than if the ferromagnetic layers are anti aligned This constitutes a magnetic field sensor Two variants of GMR have been applied in devices 1 current in plane CIP where the electric current flows parallel to the layers and 2 current perpendicular to plane CPP where the electric current flows in a direction perpendicular to the layers Other metal based spintronics devices Tunnel magnetoresistance TMR where CPP transport is achieved by using quantum mechanical tunneling of electrons through a thin insulator separating ferromagnetic layers Spin transfer torque where a current of spin polarized electrons is used to control the magnetization direction of ferromagnetic electrodes in the device Spin wave logic devices carry information in the phase Interference and spin wave scattering can perform logic operations Spintronic logic devices editNon volatile spin logic devices to enable scaling are being extensively studied 13 Spin transfer torque based logic devices that use spins and magnets for information processing have been proposed 14 15 These devices are part of the ITRS exploratory road map Logic in memory applications are already in the development stage 16 17 A 2017 review article can be found in Materials Today 4 A generalized circuit theory for spintronic integrated circuits has been proposed 18 so that the physics of spin transport can be utilized by SPICE developers and subsequently by circuit and system designers for the exploration of spintronics for beyond CMOS computing Applications edit Read heads of magnetic hard drives are based on the GMR or TMR effect Motorola developed a first generation 256 kb magnetoresistive random access memory MRAM based on a single magnetic tunnel junction and a single transistor that has a read write cycle of under 50 nanoseconds 19 Everspin has since developed a 4 Mb version 20 Two second generation MRAM techniques are in development thermal assisted switching TAS 21 and spin transfer torque STT 22 Another design racetrack memory encodes information in the direction of magnetization between domain walls of a ferromagnetic wire In 2012 persistent spin helices of synchronized electrons were made to persist for more than a nanosecond a 30 fold increase over earlier efforts and longer than the duration of a modern processor clock cycle 23 Semiconductor based spintronic devices editDoped semiconductor materials display dilute ferromagnetism In recent years dilute magnetic oxides DMOs including ZnO based DMOs and TiO2 based DMOs have been the subject of numerous experimental and computational investigations 24 25 Non oxide ferromagnetic semiconductor sources like manganese doped gallium arsenide Ga Mn As 26 increase the interface resistance with a tunnel barrier 27 or using hot electron injection 28 Spin detection in semiconductors has been addressed with multiple techniques Faraday Kerr rotation of transmitted reflected photons 29 Circular polarization analysis of electroluminescence 30 Nonlocal spin valve adapted from Johnson and Silsbee s work with metals 31 Ballistic spin filtering 32 The latter technique was used to overcome the lack of spin orbit interaction and materials issues to achieve spin transport in silicon 33 Because external magnetic fields and stray fields from magnetic contacts can cause large Hall effects and magnetoresistance in semiconductors which mimic spin valve effects the only conclusive evidence of spin transport in semiconductors is demonstration of spin precession and dephasing in a magnetic field non collinear to the injected spin orientation called the Hanle effect Applications edit Applications using spin polarized electrical injection have shown threshold current reduction and controllable circularly polarized coherent light output 34 Examples include semiconductor lasers Future applications may include a spin based transistor having advantages over MOSFET devices such as steeper sub threshold slope Magnetic tunnel transistor The magnetic tunnel transistor with a single base layer 35 has the following terminals Emitter FM1 Injects spin polarized hot electrons into the base Base FM2 Spin dependent scattering takes place in the base It also serves as a spin filter Collector GaAs A Schottky barrier is formed at the interface It only collects electrons that have enough energy to overcome the Schottky barrier and when states are available in the semiconductor The magnetocurrent MC is given as M C I c p I c a p I c a p displaystyle MC frac I c p I c ap I c ap nbsp And the transfer ratio TR is T R I C I E displaystyle TR frac I C I E nbsp MTT promises a highly spin polarized electron source at room temperature Storage media edit Antiferromagnetic storage media have been studied as an alternative to ferromagnetism 36 especially since with antiferromagnetic material the bits can be stored as well as with ferromagnetic material Instead of the usual definition 0 magnetisation upwards 1 magnetisation downwards the states can be e g 0 vertically alternating spin configuration and 1 horizontally alternating spin configuration 37 The main advantages of antiferromagnetic material are insensitivity to data damaging perturbations by stray fields due to zero net external magnetization 38 no effect on near particles implying that antiferromagnetic device elements would not magnetically disturb its neighboring elements 38 far shorter switching times antiferromagnetic resonance frequency is in the THz range compared to GHz ferromagnetic resonance frequency 39 broad range of commonly available antiferromagnetic materials including insulators semiconductors semimetals metals and superconductors 39 Research is being done into how to read and write information to antiferromagnetic spintronics as their net zero magnetization makes this difficult compared to conventional ferromagnetic spintronics In modern MRAM detection and manipulation of ferromagnetic order by magnetic fields has largely been abandoned in favor of more efficient and scalable reading and writing by electrical current Methods of reading and writing information by current rather than fields are also being investigated in antiferromagnets as fields are ineffective anyway Writing methods currently being investigated in antiferromagnets are through spin transfer torque and spin orbit torque from the spin Hall effect and the Rashba effect Reading information in antiferromagnets via magnetoresistance effects such as tunnel magnetoresistance is also being explored 40 See also editElectric dipole spin resonance Josephson effect Magnetoresistive random access memory MRAM Magnonics Potential applications of graphene Spintronics Rashba effect Spin pumping Spin transfer torque Spinhenge Home Spinmechatronics Spinplasmonics Unconventional computing Valleytronics List of emerging technologies MultiferroicsReferences edit Wolf S A Chtchelkanova A Y Treger D M 2006 Spintronics A retrospective and perspective IBM Journal of Research and Development 50 101 110 doi 10 1147 rd 501 0101 Physics Profile Stu Wolf True D Hollywood Story Spintronics A Spin Based Electronics Vision for the Future Sciencemag org 16 November 2001 Retrieved on 21 October 2013 a b Bhatti S et al 2017 Spintronics based random access memory a review Materials Today 20 9 530 548 doi 10 1016 j mattod 2017 07 007 Johnson M Silsbee R H 1985 Interfacial charge spin coupling Injection and detection of spin magnetization in metals Physical Review Letters 55 17 1790 1793 Bibcode 1985PhRvL 55 1790J doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 55 1790 PMID 10031924 Baibich M N Broto J M Fert A Nguyen Van Dau F N Petroff F Etienne P Creuzet G Friederich A Chazelas J 1988 Giant Magnetoresistance of 001 Fe 001 Cr Magnetic Superlattices PDF Physical Review Letters 61 21 2472 2475 Bibcode 1988PhRvL 61 2472B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 61 2472 PMID 10039127 Binasch G Grunberg P Saurenbach F Zinn W 1989 Enhanced magnetoresistance in layered magnetic structures with antiferromagnetic interlayer exchange Physical Review B 39 7 4828 4830 Bibcode 1989PhRvB 39 4828B doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 39 4828 PMID 9948867 Julliere M 1975 Tunneling between ferromagnetic films Physics Letters A 54 3 225 226 Bibcode 1975PhLA 54 225J doi 10 1016 0375 9601 75 90174 7 Datta S amp Das B 1990 Electronic analog of the electrooptic modulator Applied Physics Letters 56 7 665 667 Bibcode 1990ApPhL 56 665D doi 10 1063 1 102730 E I Rashba Cyclotron and combined resonances in a perpendicular field Sov Phys Solid State 2 1109 1122 1960 Linder Jacob Robinson Jason W A 2 April 2015 Superconducting spintronics Nature Physics 11 4 307 315 arXiv 1510 00713 Bibcode 2015NatPh 11 307L doi 10 1038 nphys3242 ISSN 1745 2473 S2CID 31028550 Eschrig Matthias 2011 Spin polarized supercurrents for spintronics Physics Today 64 1 43 49 Bibcode 2011PhT 64a 43E doi 10 1063 1 3541944 International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors Behin Aein B Datta D Salahuddin S Datta S 2010 Proposal for an all spin logic device with built in memory Nature Nanotechnology 5 4 266 270 Bibcode 2010NatNa 5 266B doi 10 1038 nnano 2010 31 PMID 20190748 Manipatruni Sasikanth Nikonov Dmitri E and Young Ian A 2011 1112 2746 Circuit Theory for SPICE of Spintronic Integrated Circuits Arxiv org Retrieved on 21 October 2013 Crocus Partners With Starchip To Develop System On Chip Solutions Based on Magnetic Logic Unit MLU Technology crocus technology com 8 December 2011 Groundbreaking New Technology for Improving the Reliability of Spintronics Logic Integrated Circuits Nec com 11 June 2012 S Manipatruni D E Nikonov and I A Young Modeling and Design of Spintronic Integrated Circuits in IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems I Regular Papers vol 59 no 12 pp 2801 2814 Dec 2012 doi 10 1109 TCSI 2012 2206465 https ieeexplore ieee org stamp stamp jsp tp amp arnumber 6359950 amp isnumber 6359940 Spintronics Sigma Aldrich Retrieved on 21 October 2013 Everspin Archived 30 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Everspin Retrieved on 21 October 2013 Hoberman Barry The Emergence of Practical MRAM Archived 21 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine crocustechnology com LaPedus Mark 18 June 2009 Tower invests in Crocus tips MRAM foundry deal eetimes com Walser M Reichl C Wegscheider W amp Salis G 2012 Direct mapping of the formation of a persistent spin helix Nature Physics 8 10 757 arXiv 1209 4857 Bibcode 2012NatPh 8 757W doi 10 1038 nphys2383 S2CID 119209785 Assadi M H N Hanaor D A H 2013 Theoretical study on copper s energetics and magnetism in TiO2 polymorphs Journal of Applied Physics 113 23 233913 233913 5 arXiv 1304 1854 Bibcode 2013JAP 113w3913A doi 10 1063 1 4811539 S2CID 94599250 Ogale S B 2010 Dilute doping defects and ferromagnetism in metal oxide systems Advanced Materials 22 29 3125 3155 Bibcode 2010AdM 22 3125O doi 10 1002 adma 200903891 PMID 20535732 S2CID 25307693 Jonker B Park Y Bennett B Cheong H Kioseoglou G Petrou A 2000 Robust electrical spin injection into a semiconductor heterostructure Physical Review B 62 12 8180 Bibcode 2000PhRvB 62 8180J doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 62 8180 Hanbicki A T Jonker B T Itskos G Kioseoglou G Petrou A 2002 Efficient electrical spin injection from a magnetic metal tunnel barrier contact into a semiconductor Applied Physics Letters 80 7 1240 arXiv cond mat 0110059 Bibcode 2002ApPhL 80 1240H doi 10 1063 1 1449530 S2CID 119098659 Jiang X Wang R Van Dijken S Shelby R MacFarlane R Solomon G Harris J Parkin S 2003 Optical Detection of Hot Electron Spin Injection into GaAs from a Magnetic Tunnel Transistor Source Physical Review Letters 90 25 256603 Bibcode 2003PhRvL 90y6603J doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 90 256603 PMID 12857153 Kikkawa J Awschalom D 1998 Resonant Spin Amplification in n Type GaAs Physical Review Letters 80 19 4313 Bibcode 1998PhRvL 80 4313K doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 80 4313 Jonker Berend T Polarized optical emission due to decay or recombination of spin polarized injected carriers US Patent 5874749 Archived 12 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Issued on 23 February 1999 Lou X Adelmann C Crooker S A Garlid E S Zhang J Reddy K S M Flexner S D Palmstrom C J Crowell P A 2007 Electrical detection of spin transport in lateral ferromagnet semiconductor devices Nature Physics 3 3 197 arXiv cond mat 0701021 Bibcode 2007NatPh 3 197L doi 10 1038 nphys543 S2CID 51390849 Appelbaum I Huang B Monsma D J 2007 Electronic measurement and control of spin transport in silicon Nature 447 7142 295 298 arXiv cond mat 0703025 Bibcode 2007Natur 447 295A doi 10 1038 nature05803 PMID 17507978 S2CID 4340632 Zutic I Fabian J 2007 Spintronics Silicon twists Nature 447 7142 268 269 Bibcode 2007Natur 447 268Z doi 10 1038 447269a PMID 17507969 S2CID 32830840 Holub M Shin J Saha D Bhattacharya P 2007 Electrical Spin Injection and Threshold Reduction in a Semiconductor Laser Physical Review Letters 98 14 146603 Bibcode 2007PhRvL 98n6603H doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 98 146603 PMID 17501298 Van Dijken S Jiang X Parkin S S P 2002 Room temperature operation of a high output current magnetic tunnel transistor Applied Physics Letters 80 18 3364 Bibcode 2002ApPhL 80 3364V doi 10 1063 1 1474610 Jungwirth T 28 April 2014 Relativistic Approaches to Spintronics with Antiferromagnets PDF announcement of a physics colloquium at a Bavarian university Archived from the original PDF on 29 April 2014 Retrieved 29 April 2014 This corresponds mathematically to the transition from the rotation group SO 3 to its relativistic covering the double group SU 2 a b Jungwirth T Marti X Wadley P Wunderlich J 2016 Antiferromagnetic spintronics Nature Nanotechnology Springer Nature 11 3 231 241 arXiv 1509 05296 Bibcode 2016NatNa 11 231J doi 10 1038 nnano 2016 18 ISSN 1748 3387 PMID 26936817 S2CID 5058124 a b Gomonay O Jungwirth T Sinova J 21 February 2017 Concepts of antiferromagnetic spintronics Physica Status Solidi RRL Wiley 11 4 1700022 arXiv 1701 06556 Bibcode 2017PSSRR 1100022G doi 10 1002 pssr 201700022 ISSN 1862 6254 S2CID 73575617 Chappert Claude Fert Albert van Dau Frederic Nguyen 2007 The emergence of spin electronics in data storage Nature Materials Springer Science and Business Media LLC 6 11 813 823 Bibcode 2007NatMa 6 813C doi 10 1038 nmat2024 ISSN 1476 1122 PMID 17972936 S2CID 21075877 Further reading edit Introduction to Spintronics Marc Cahay Supriyo Bandyopadhyay CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 3133 1 J A Gupta R Knobel N Samarth D D Awschalom 29 June 2001 Ultrafast Manipulation of Electron Spin Coherence Science 292 5526 2458 2461 Bibcode 2001Sci 292 2458G doi 10 1126 science 1061169 PMID 11431559 S2CID 22898874 Wolf S A Awschalom DD Buhrman RA Daughton JM von Molnar S Roukes ML Chtchelkanova AY Treger DM 16 November 2001 Spintronics A Spin Based Electronics Vision for the Future Science 294 5546 1488 1495 Bibcode 2001Sci 294 1488W doi 10 1126 science 1065389 PMID 11711666 S2CID 14010432 Sharma P 28 January 2005 How to Create a Spin Current Science 307 5709 531 533 doi 10 1126 science 1099388 PMID 15681374 S2CID 118636399 Tomasz Dietl David D Awschalom Maria Kaminska et al eds 2009 Spintronics Academic Press ISBN 9780080914213 Zutic I Das Sarma S 2004 Spintronics Fundamentals and applications Reviews of Modern Physics 76 2 323 410 arXiv cond mat 0405528 Bibcode 2004RvMP 76 323Z doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 76 323 S2CID 119398474 Parkin Stuart Ching Ray Chang Chantrell Roy eds 2011 SPIN World Scientific ISSN 2010 3247 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Spintronics Steps Forward University of South Florida News Bader S D Parkin S S P 2010 Spintronics Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics 1 71 88 Bibcode 2010ARCMP 1 71B doi 10 1146 annurev conmatphys 070909 104123 External links edit23 milestones in the history of spin compiled by Nature Milestone 18 A Giant Leap for Electronics Giant Magneto resistance compiled by Nature Milestone 20 Information in a Spin Datta Das compiled by Nature Awschalom David D Flatte Michael E Samarth Nitin June 2002 Spintronics Scientific American 286 6 66 73 Bibcode 2002SciAm 286f 66A doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0602 66 PMID 12030093 Spintronics portal with news and resources RaceTrack InformationWeek April 11 2008 Archived 14 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Spintronics research targets GaAs Spintronics Tutorial Lecture on Spin transport by S Datta from Datta Das transistor Part 1 and Part 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spintronics amp oldid 1172835310, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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