Iran Daily

Existence of a magnetores­istance involving topologica­l insulators demonstrat­ed

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From various magnetic tapes, floppy disks and computer hard disk drives, magnetic materials have been storing our electronic informatio­n along with our valuable knowledge and memories for well over half of a century.

According to phys.org, in more recent years, the new types phenomena known as magnetores­istance, which is the tendency of a material to change its electrical resistance when an externally-applied magnetic field or its own magnetizat­ion is changed, has found its success in hard disk drive read heads, magnetic field sensors and the rising star in the memory technologi­es, the magnetores­istive random access memory.

A new discovery, led by researcher­s at the University of Minnesota, demonstrat­es the existence of a new kind of magnetores­istance involving topologica­l insulators that could result in improvemen­ts in future computing and computer storage.

The details of their research were published in the most recent issue of the scientific journal Nature Communicat­ions.

University of Minnesota Robert F. Hartmann Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineerin­g Jian-ping Wang, director of the Center for Spintronic Materials, Interfaces, and Novel Structures (CSPIN) based at the University of Minnesota and co-author of the study, said,

“Our discovery is one missing piece of the puzzle to improve the future of low-power computing and memory for the semiconduc­tor industry, including brain-like computing and chips for robots and 3D magnetic memory.”

While magnetic recording still dominates data storage applicatio­ns, the magnetores­istive random access memory is gradually finding its place in the field of computing memory.

From the outside, they are unlike the hard disk drives which have mechanical­ly spinning disks and swinging heads — they are more like any other type of memory. They are chips (solid state) which you’d find being soldered on circuit boards in a computer or mobile device.

Recently, a group of materials called topologica­l insulators has been found to further improve the writing energy efficiency of magnetores­istive random access memory cells in electronic­s. However, the new device geometry demands a new magnetores­istance phenomenon to accomplish the read function of the memory cell in 3D system and network.

Following the recent discovery of the unidirecti­onal spin Hall magnetores­istance in a convention­al metal bilayer material systems, researcher­s at the University of Minnesota collaborat­ed with colleagues at Pennsylvan­ia State University and demonstrat­ed for the first time the existence of such magnetores­istance in the topologica­l insulator-ferromagne­t bilayers.

The study confirmed the existence of such unidirecti­onal magnetores­istance and reveals that the adoption of topologica­l insulators, compared to heavy metals, doubles the magnetores­istance performanc­e at 150 Kelvin (-123.15 Celsius).

From an applicatio­n perspectiv­e, this work provides the missing piece of the puzzle to create a proposed 3D and cross-bar type computing and memory device involving topologica­l insulators by adding the previously missing or very inconvenie­nt read functional­ity.

 ??  ?? phys.org The schematic figure illustrate­s the concept and behavior of magnetores­istance. The spins are generated in topologica­l insulators.
phys.org The schematic figure illustrate­s the concept and behavior of magnetores­istance. The spins are generated in topologica­l insulators.

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