ARGONNE,
Ill. (Jan. 17, 2006) — An unusual pool of scientific
talent at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne
National Laboratory, combined with new nanofabrication
and nanocharacterization instruments, is helping
to open a new frontier in electronics, to be made
up of very small and very fast devices.
A new discovery by this group opens a path to new
computer technologies and related devices, and could
drive entire industries into the future, the researchers
say.
The researchers learned that swirling spin structures
called magnetic vortices, when trapped within lithographically
patterned ferromagnetic structures, behave in novel
ways. In a nickel-iron alloy, the two vortices swirl
in opposite directions, one clockwise and the other
counterclockwise. However, the researchers discovered
that the magnetic polarity of the central core of
the vortices, like the eye of a hurricane, controlled
the time-evolution of the magnetic properties, not
the swirling direction.
The material being studied is about one micron in
size, and the area of the vortex core is about 10
nanometers in size. For comparison, the period at
the end of this sentence is about 100 microns or
100,000 nanometers in diameter.
Group leader Sam Bader, an Argonne scientist for
more than 30 years, explained that the work could
lead to the next generation of electronic devices. “When
the first computer hard disk was introduced 50 years
ago, it required a rather large size to store each
bit of digital information. On today's computer disks,
the corresponding size is about one-50-millionth
of that needed in the original disks. We are now
moving well into the nanoscale range, and nanomagnetism
is one of the real drivers of the nanotechnology
field.”
The beauty of nanoscience, Bader said, is that researchers
can take conventional materials, such as the nickel-iron
alloy, reduce them to the nanoscale and create whole
new properties. “Thinking far into the future, for
example, we can envision circuits where the flow
of spin, not the flow of electrical charge, will
operate computers and other electronic devices while
saving wasted heat energy that is generated in present-day
devices.”
As with other materials at the nanoscale, Bader
said, nanomagnets take on new properties, some of
them unpredictable.
Understanding that unpredictability and underlying
physics is important to researchers developing the
new technology, said Argonne scientist Val Novosad. “With
this very small array of spins, where each atom has
a magnetic moment, the vortex core responds to stimuli
by traveling in spiral trajectories.”
The researchers created the material in the form
of an array of elliptical pancakes, each holding
two vortex cores, stimulated the material with a
magnetic pulse and watched the subsequent behavior.
“This first-ever reported experiment revealing unique
dynamic behavior of two interacting magnetic vortices
required a considerable assist from technology,” Novosad
said.
Argonne senior scientist Marcos Grimsditch provided
the inspiration for the novel magnetic configuration
of the samples, which were fabricated using a new
electron beam lithography facility to be housed at
Argonne 's Center
for Nanoscale Materials , scheduled to open later
this year. The tiny process could be monitored using
a new instrument to measure spin resonance frequencies,
developed by Argonne senior scientist Frank Fradin.
And the interpretation of the experimental data was
assisted by numerical modeling from Argonne post-doctoral
student Kristen Buchanan, winner of a fellowship
from Canada 's Natural
Science and Engineering Research Council , and
the analytical theory expertise of visiting theorist
Konstantin Guslienko at Argonne's Theory
Institute .
“Every step along the way was state of the art,” Bader
said, “from the fabrication of the material to the
measurement of the spin to the creation of software
to illustrate the data through a movie.”
The research was reported in the new peer-reviewed
journal, Nature
Physics . The six Argonne researchers are co-authors
of the article, along with Pierre Roy of Uppsala
University in Sweden , a graduate student in
residence at Argonne as part of his thesis research
experience.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne
National Laboratory conducts basic and applied scientific
research across a wide spectrum of disciplines, ranging
from high-energy physics to climatology and biotechnology.
Since 1990, Argonne has worked with more than 600
companies and numerous federal agencies and other
organizations to help advance America's scientific
leadership and prepare the nation for the future.
Argonne is managed by the University
of Chicago for the U.S.
Department of Energy 's Office
of Science .
For more information , please contact Catherine
Foster (630/252-5580 or cfoster@anl.gov )
at Argonne.
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