Magnetic Vortex Reveals Key to Spintronic Speed Limit

Scientists measured a key effect of electron spin essential to engineering the next generation of high-performing digital devices.

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Scientists measured a key effect of electron spin essential to engineering the next generation of high-performing digital devices

UPTON, NY — The evolution of digital electronics is a story of miniaturization – each generation of circuitry requires less space and energy to perform the same tasks. But even as high-speed processors move into handheld smart phones, current data storage technology has a functional limit: magnetically stored digital information becomes unstable when too tightly packed. The answer to maintaining the breath-taking pace of our ongoing computer revolution may be the denser, faster, and smarter technology of spintronics.

Spintronic devices use electron spin, a subtle quantum characteristic, to write and read information. But to mobilize this emerging technology, scientists must understand exactly how to manipulate spin as a reliable carrier of computer code. Now, scientists at the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have precisely measured a key parameter of electron interactions called non-adiabatic spin torque that is essential to the future development of spintronic devices. Not only does this unprecedented precision – the findings to be published in the journal Nature Communications on August 28 – guide the reading and writing of digital information, but it defines the upper limit on processing speed that may underlie a spintronic revolution.

Physicists Yimei Zhu (back left), Shawn Pollard (seated), and Dario Arena used this transmission electron microscope to image the magnetic vortex core and measure a key fundamental value for spintronic technology. Brookhaven National Laboratory  
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