Researchers improve ability to write and store information on electronic
devices
ARGONNE, Ill. (Sept. 13, 2007) – New research led by the U.S. Department of
Energy's Argonne National Laboratory physicist Matthias Bode provides a more
thorough understanding of new mechanisms, which makes it possible to switch
a magnetic nanoparticle without any magnetic field and may enable computers
to more accurately write and store information.
Bode and four colleagues at the University
of Hamburg used a special scanning
tunneling microscope equipped with a magnetic probe tip to force a spin current
through a small magnetic structure. The researchers were able to show that
the structure's magnetization direction is not affected by a small current,
but can be influenced if the spin current is sufficiently high.
Most computers today use dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, in which each
piece of binary digital information, or bit, is stored in an individual capacitor
in an integrated circuit. Bode's experiment focused on magneto-resistive random
access memory, or MRAM, which stores data in magnetic storage elements consisting
of two ferromagnetic layers separated by a thin non-magnetic spacer. While
one of the two layers remains polarized in a constant direction, the other
layer becomes polarized through the application of an external magnetic field
either in the same direction as the top layer (for a "0") or in
the opposite direction (for a "1").
Traditionally, MRAM are switched by magnetic fields. As the bit size has shrunk
in each successive generation of computers in order to accommodate more memory
in the same physical area, however, they have become more and more susceptible
to "false writes" or "far-field" effects, Bode said. In
this situation, the magnetic field may switch the magnetization not only of
the target bit but of its neighbors as well. By using the tip of the Scanning
Tunneling Microscope (STM), which has the potential to resolve structures down
to a single atom, the scientists were able to eliminate that effect.
Bode and
his colleagues were the first ones who did such work with an STM that generates
high spatial-resolution data. "If you now push just a current through
this bit, there's no current through the next structure over," Bode said. "This
is a really local way of writing information."
The high resolution of the STM tip might enable scientists to look for small
impurities in the magnetic storage structures and to investigate how they affect
the magnet's polarization. This technique could lead to the discovery of a
material or a method to make bit switching more efficient. "If you find
that one impurity helps to switch the structure, you might be able to intentionally
dope the magnet such that it switches at lower currents," Bode said.
Results of this research were published in the September 14 issue of Science and related research was published earlier this year in Nature.
Funding for this work was provided by Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft
and the European Union project ASPRINT. This work was conducted prior to Bode's
arrival at Argonne. His research at Argonne will be predominately funded by
DOE's Office of Basic
Energy Sciences.
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For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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