Electronics

Latest spintronics breakthrough detects flow of spinning electrons in real time

The spintronics breakthrough by Hui Zhao could lead the way to the development of superior computers and electronics
The spintronics breakthrough by Hui Zhao could lead the way to the development of superior computers and electronics

Spin electronics, or “spintronics” promises to revolutionize computing. We’ve covered numerous breakthroughs in the field including controlling the spin of electrons, manipulating single electrons independently, and the first plastic spintronic computer memory device. However, one major hurdle for spintronics researchers has been the difficulty in detecting the flow of spinning electrons in real time. The discovery of a new way to recognize currents of spinning electrons within a semiconductor changes that and could lead the way to the development of superior computers and electronics.

“We have been using the charge of the electron for several decades,” said Hui Zhao, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Kansas (KU). “But right now the size of each device is just 30 to 50 nanometers, and you don’t have many atoms remaining on that tiny scale. We can’t continue that way anymore because we’re hitting a fundamental limit.”

Spintronics

Instead of using the presence or absence of electronic charges, spintronics relies on the direction of an electron’s rotation to convey data.“Roughly speaking, an electron can be viewed as a tiny ball that spins like a baseball,” said Zhao. “The difference is that a baseball can spin at any speed, but an electron can only spin at a certain speed – either counterclockwise or clockwise. Therefore, we can use one spin state to represent ‘zero’ and another to represent ‘one.’ Because a single electron can carry this information, this takes much less time and much less energy. The goal is to replace everything – from computers to memory devices — to have higher performance and less energy consumption,”

“We haven’t been able to monitor the velocity of those spinning electrons, but velocity is associated with the spin current,” Zhao said. “So there’s been no way to directly detect the spin current so far.”

Laser reveals flow

Zhao and KU graduate student Lalani Werake discovered that shining a laser beam on a piece of semiconductor generates different color lights if the spinning electrons are flowing, and the brightness of the new light is related to the strength of the spin current.The optical effect, known as “second-harmonic generation,” can monitor spin-current in real time without altering the current itself. Zhao compares his new method with a police officer’s radar gun, which tracks a car’s speed as it passes.

This vastly improves upon spin-current analysis now in use, which the KU researcher says is akin to analyzing still photographs to determine a car’s speed, long after the car has sped away.

“Spintronics is still in the research phase, and we hope that this new technology can be used in labs to look at problems that interest researchers,” said Zhao. “As spintronics become industrialized, we expect this could become a routine technique to check the quality of devices, for example.”

Results from the researcher’s work in KU’s Ultrafast Laser Lab will be published in the September issue of Nature Physics.

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