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ANGELES, CA -- How much energy does it take for an electron
to hop from atom to atom, and how do the magnetic properties
of the material influence the rate or ease of hopping?
Answers to those questions could help explain why some
materials, like those used in a computer hard drive,
become conductors only in a magnetic field while they
are very strong insulators otherwise. They might also
help scientists learn how to use the electron's "spin"
(a property analogous to the spinning of a child's toy
top), as well as its charge, to carry information in
a new field known as spintronics.
Stéphane
Grenier, a postdoctoral fellow studying electronic
excitations, or "electron hopping," at the
U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory,
will describe the techniques he uses and the properties
of these materials at the March 2005 meeting of the
American Physical Society in Los Angeles, California.
His talk took place on Monday, March 21, at the Los
Angeles Convention Center.
"We
are looking at something very local, electrons hopping
between a pair of atoms, to help us understand important
macroscopic effects," Grenier says. "This
information could help predict which materials might
have the properties needed for particular applications
-- say, increasing the storage capacity of computer
hard drives -- and direct the fabrication of new materials
in which these properties are optimized."
To determine the energy needed
by an electron to hop from one atom to another atom,
Grenier used a technique called inelastic x-ray scattering
at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National
Laboratory. He shines x-ray light onto the sample
and measures the tiny difference in energy between
the incoming and outgoing photons. This difference
is the amount of energy needed to move the electrons.
He used this technique to study
materials with different magnetic "lattices"
-- ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic. In ferromagnetic
materials, the atoms' magnetic moments (that is, their
spins) are all aligned in the same direction. In antiferromagnetic
materials, the magnetic moments of the adjacent atoms
point in opposite directions.
"When
the magnetic moments are aligned, the electron hopping
is increased between particular atoms. That is, more
electrons make the jump to their neighbors, and it
takes less energy to move them," Grenier says.
"While this has been known for a while, we have
shown the direction in which the electrons move and
exactly what price they 'pay,' in terms of energy,
to move, and the influence the magnetic lattice of
the material has on this hopping."
The electrons want to align
their own magnetic moments, or spins, with that of
the atoms in the lattice, he explains. "They
will do so only if all the atoms' magnetic moments
are aligned -- that is when the 'fare' for hopping
has its lowest price," he said.
Electrons
moving with their spins aligned in the same direction
make a current of spins, which could be used, somewhat
like currents of electrical charge are now used, to
pass or transform information in future electronic
components made of tailored magnetic lattices -- a
future generation of circuits based on the science
of "spintronics," which is also carried
out at Brookhaven Lab.
Grenier's studies, along with
theoretical analysis of the materials, may also help
scientists understand why some materials possess properties
such as superconductivity and "colossal magnetoresistance,"
the ability of some strong insulators to become good
conductors when induced by a magnetic field.
Studies on atomic magnetism
have applications for understanding novel materials
-- including spintronic materials and superconductors
-- that will revolutionize the electronic and energy
industries. Such studies using x-rays can only be
performed in the U.S. at x-ray synchrotron radiation
facilities built and managed by the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office of Science.
This research was funded by
the Office of Basic Energy Sciences within the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office of Science.
One
of the ten national laboratories overseen and funded
primarily by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department
of Energy (DOE), Brookhaven National Laboratory conducts
research in the physical, biomedical, and environmental
sciences, as well as in energy technologies and national
security. Brookhaven Lab also builds and operates
major scientific facilities available to university,
industry and government researchers. Brookhaven is
operated and managed for DOE's Office of Science by
Brookhaven Science Associates, a limited-liability
company founded by Stony Brook University, the largest
academic user of Laboratory facilities, and Battelle,
a nonprofit, applied science and technology organization.
Visit Brookhaven Lab's electronic newsroom for links,
news archives, graphics, and more: http://www.bnl.gov/newsroom
Contact: Karen McNulty Walsh,
631 344-8350, kmcnulty@bnl.gov or
Mona S. Rowe, 631 344-5056, mrowe@bnl.gov
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