Tag Archives: spin electronics

At the frontier in electronic materials

June 27, 2012

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Conference poster at the main entrance to the Aachen congress centreFor the past weeks this blog has been more quiet than usual. Mostly, I was busy with a number of projects, including the co-organisation of a Nature Conference – ‘Frontiers in Electronic Materials: Correlation Effects and Memristive Phenomena‘. The conference took place in Aachen/Germany, and was organized in collaboration with the Jülich-Aachen Research Alliance (JARA) formed by the RWTH Aachen University and the Helmholtz research centre in Jülich – who did a great job in getting this meeting off the ground. Rainer Waser in particular dedicated a tremendous amount of work to the conference. And with close to 600 attendees, the popularity of the conference certainly exceeded all our expectations.

I do not intend to summarize all the interesting talks at the conference here. Instead, I like to focus on two aspects that I think contributed in particular to the success of the conference, and that could be of interest also to those that couldn’t attend the meeting. They’re related to the scope of the conference and its organisation. […]

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2010 – twelve months of great science

December 27, 2010

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The past year has been a great year for science with major advances in several areas. Too many exciting results to mention here. Instead, to reflect about the past year I have chosen a representative paper for each month of the year that I hope can serve as an example of the great science going on in a number of research fields. Of course, this is a highly subjective and personal collection, and indeed there might be others worth mentioning. But the aim was also to provide a balanced overview of the year that covers a variety of topics.

Of course, if you have an exciting paper to add, please feel free to use the comments section below to let us know!

Anyway, enough said, here are some of my highlights from the past year:

Simulations of electronic excitations in an iron-based superconductor. Image by Oak Ridge National Laboratory via flickr.

JANUARY – iron-based superconductors

Since they were discovered in 2008, iron-based superconductors, the pnictides, have been one of the hottest topics in condensed matter physics. Part of their appeal stems from the fact that they are based on iron, which is a magnetic element. Normally, magnets and superconductivity exclude each other.

The iron-based compounds have a similar crystal structure as the so-called cuprates, which are the materials with the highest superconducting temperatures known. The mechanism for these high-temperature superconductors is unknown, and studying the iron-based superconductors may also be relevant to the understanding of the cuprates.

This paper published in Science shows for the first time that the electrons in the iron-based superconductors show a periodic arrangement that is different to the periodicity of the atoms in the crystal. Similar observations have been made in the cuprates, and their understanding is considered important to the mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity.

Chuang, T., Allan, M., Lee, J., Xie, Y., Ni, N., Bud’ko, S., Boebinger, G., Canfield, P., & Davis, J. (2010). Nematic Electronic Structure in the “Parent” State of the Iron-Based Superconductor Ca(Fe1-xCox)2As2 Science, 327 (5962), 181-184 DOI: 10.1126/science.1181083

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Get those computers spinning

December 17, 2010

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Photo by Philippe Teuwen via wikimedia.

This week’s issue of the magazine Science has no less than three papers on a single topic, namely new ways of computing using the quantum mechanical property of spin. Taken together, these provide a brief glimpse into the different ways researchers have progressed in incorporating spin into electronic devices.

The fundamental element of a computer chip is the transistor. The transistor is where the bits are switched from 0 to 1 and vice versa. Transistors are made from semiconductors such as silicon and operate by moving electrical charges between two contacts. But electrical charges are not the only possibility to operate a computer. Another one is to use spin.

What is spin and why do we care?

Spin is a quantity that is related to the rotation of fundamental particles around their own axis, similar to a spinning top. The concept of spin is deeply rooted in quantum mechanics, pioneered by people such as Wolgang Pauli and Niels Bohr. Of course, the analogy of such a fundamental property to a spinning top does not work fully. If you want to learn more about the intriguing world of spin, take a look at Dave Goldberg’s blog post.

But how does spin have any relevance in computing? Well, if the particle with spin also has an electrical charge, as the electron does, this also creates a magnetic field, similar to that of a tiny compass. This magnetic field can be used to store information just like an electric charge. Whether the compass points upwards or downwards then corresponds to the 0 and 1 of a bit.

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