COLUMBIA,
Mo. - A few years ago a University of Missouri-Columbia
professor and his student had a theory, and a few
weeks ago a physicist in California proved it. The
unusual part is that neither person knew about the
work of the other. The work has important applications
for the future design of electronic devices using
the "spin" instead of the "charge" of
an electron.
"It was a complete surprise. They didn't know
about our work and we didn't know about them," said
Giovanni Vignale, MU professor of physics, who worked
with Irene D'Amico, assistant professor at the University
of York in the United Kingdom, who was Vignale's
student at the time. "They didn't know about
our work and we didn't know about them. Generally,
a theorist gives an idea to an experimentalist and
they are aware of each other from the beginning."
The D'Amico-Vignale theory was originally met with
skepticism. They theory on 'spin coulomb drag' was
in Physical Review in 2000 and Europhysics Letters
in 2001. D'Amico and Vignale theorized about the
behavior of the spin of electrons in semiconductors.
Vignale said 'spintronics' is considered a hot field
for the future of electronic devices. Computer memories
are based on electric charge and need continuous
power input. A spintronic device would make computer
memories as permanent as a hard drive, Vignale explained,
but faster, more flexible and efficient. A spintronic
device would literally do away with boot-up times
on computers.
"If you want to design spintronic devices
then you have to take the 'spin Coulomb drag' into
effect," Vignale said.
The validation for D'Amico and Vignale's work came
from Joe Orenstein and his colleagues at Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory. They discovered the
effect that D'Amico and Vignale called 'spin Coulomb
drag' and recognized its importance for the future
design of spintronics. A search revealed that D'Amico
and Vignale had not only anticipated this idea but
also had formed a quantitative theory of spin diffusion.
The theory and the experiment matched.
The two parties met at a physics meeting in Los
Angeles this year, where Vignale was told there was
a certain presentation he really should not miss.
Orenstein's presentation came as a complete surprise
to Vignale, who said he was gratified by the validation
of his work.
"We were doing something quite different when
we came up with this, as always," Vignale laughed.
Orenstein's work was published in the most recent
issue of Nature.
Links:
University of Missouri http://www.missouri.edu/index.cfm
Contact: Jennifer Faddis
Sr. Information Specialist
573-882-6217
faddisj@missouri.edu
|