| CNSE
spintronics lab research shows silicon can maintain
a permanent magnetic field above room temperature, which
could help to develop more effective magnetic semiconductors
and future spintronic devices.
Silicon is best known as the
material used to make semiconductor computer chips
with integrated circuits. Today, scientists at the
College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE)
at the University at Albany published research that
could lay the foundation for using silicon to develop
chips with magnetic properties, potentially impacting
the development of electron-spin-based or "spintronic"
devices.
Spintronics exploits the quantum
mechanical property of electron spin, as well as its
charge state. Potential spintronics applications include
magnetic random access memory (MRAM), which could
enable the development of computing devices that are
always on, don't require time to "boot up"
and don't require a traditional hard drive.
While semiconductor materials
such as silicon are utilized for memory and central
processing units, the permanent information in computers
is stored in magnetized hard drives which utilize
the spin of the electron.. Recent research has discovered
that a semiconductor can be made magnetic by doping
it with an impurity such as Mn. The resulting material
or diluted magnetic semiconductor (DMS) combines the
properties of magnetism used in permanent information
storage with that of semiconductor memory and logic
devices. DMS spintronic devices have the potential
to operate at considerably higher speeds and consume
less power than conventional devices.
The research conducted by CNSE
Professor Vincent LaBella and Martin Bolduc, CNSE
post-doctorate fellow, shows for the first time that
silicon can be made "ferromagnetic" or permanently
magnetic up to 127 C, well above where conventional
devices operate. The researchers achieved this by
implanting Mn into silicon up to a concentration of
1% per atom.
LaBella and Bolduc are both
specialists in spintronics research. LaBella was the
first spintronics specialist to attempt to "magnetize"
silicon, using tools at the Albany NanoTech complex,
home to CNSE.
"The results are very
exciting and open the door to silicon based spintronic
devices that operate at or above room temperature,"
said LaBella. "The samples were fabricated using
standard semiconductor processing equipment available
at Albany NanoTech to quickly get results, which were
significantly positive."
LaBella then joined forces
with Bolduc for a more extensive experiment. The two
implanted manganese into silicon in varying concentrations,
then measured the magnetic properties with a SQUID
magnetometer. They found the silicon was ferromagnetic
above room temperature, or up to 127 degrees Celsius,
opening up the possibility of its use in devices like
personal computers, phones and PDAs. "These results
indicate that the ferromagnetic exchange coupling
in Si is very strong. Our future research is focused
on understanding why this is so," said Bolduc.
The research paper, entitled
Above Room Temperature Ferromagnetism in Mn-ion implanted
Si, was published in Physical Review B. Bolduc was
lead author on the paper. For further information
or to obtain a copy of the paper, contact Shonna Keogan
at skeogan@uamail.albany.edu or vlabella@uamail.albany.edu.
About Albany NanoTech
One of the largest centers
for nanotechnology research in the country, Albany
NanoTech is home to the College of Nanoscale Science
and Engineering (CNSE) and the New York State Center
of Excellence in Nanoelectronics (NYSCEN) of the University
at Albany-State University of New York. Its 450,000
square foot complex houses the only 200mm/300mm wafer
facilities in the academic world, encompasses nanoelectronics,
system-on-a-chip technologies, biochips, optoelectronics
and photonics devices, closed-loop sensors and ultra-high-speed
communication components.
With over 65,000 square fee
of Class 1 capable 300 mm wafer cleanrooms, as well
as on-site faculty and student researchers, Albany
NanoTech provides corporate partners with a unique
environment to pioneer, develop, and test new nanoscience
and nanoengineering innovations.
Contact:
Shonna
Keogan
College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
University at Albany - SUNY
518-956-7201
skeogan@uamail.albany.edu
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