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AN INTRODUCTION TO SPINTRONICS

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Title: AN INTRODUCTION TO SPINTRONICS


1
AN INTRODUCTION TO SPINTRONICS
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NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY HAMIRPUR Centre for Materials Science and Engineering
  • BY SAMIR KUMAR
  • 10M601
  • M.TECH 1ST YEAR
  • Center for Materials Science and Engineering

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • What do we mean by spin of an electron
  • Why Spintronics
  • Spintronic Effects
  • Phases in Spintronics
  • Materials of Spintronics
  • Conclusions
  • Acknowledgments

3
INTRODUCTION
Electron has MassChargeSpin
4
What is spin?
  • One can picture an electron as a charged sphere
    rotating about an axis.
  • The rotating charged sphere will produce magnetic
    moment in that can be either up or down depending
    upon whether the rotation is anticlockwise or
    clockwise

5
Electron Spin is a Quantum phenomenon
  • A spinning sphere of charge can produce a
    magnetic moment.
  • Considering Electrons size to be of the order of
    10-12 m at that size a high spin rate of some
    1032 radian/s would be required to match the
    observed angular momentum that is velocity of the
    order of 1020 m/s.

6
Electron Spin
The component Sz along z axis
7
SPINTRONICS SPIN ELECTRONICS
  • Conventional electronic devices ignore the spin
    property.
  • Random spins have no effect on current flow.

Spintronic devices create spin-polarized currents
and use the spin to control current flow.
Spintronicsspin based electronics
What is Spintronics?
8
Moores Law
  • Moores Law states that the number of transistors
    on a silicon chip will roughly double every
    eighteen months

Why Spintronics?
9
Can Moores law keep going?
Power dissipationgreatest obstacle for Moores
law! Modern processor chips consume 100W of
power of which about 20 is wasted in leakage
through the transistor gates. The traditional
means of coping with increased power per
generation has been to scale down the operating
voltage of the chip but voltages are reaching
limits due to thermal fluctuation effects.

10
Advantages of Spintronics Devices
  • Non-volatile memory
  • Performance improves with smaller devices
  • Low power consumption
  • Spintronics does not require unique and
    specialised semiconductors
  • Dissipation less transmission
  • Switching time is very less
  • Compared to normal RAM chips, spintronic RAM
    chips will
  • increase storage densities by a factor of three
  • have faster switching and rewritability rates
    smaller
  • Promises a greater integration between the logic
    and storage devices

11
Spintronics Effects
  • GMR (Giant Magneto-Resistance)
  • FM-Metal-FM
  • MTJ (Magnetic Tunnel Junction)
  • FM-Insulator-FM

12
Giant Magneto-Resistance (GMR)
  • The 2007 Nobel prize for physics was award
    jointly to Fert and Grunberg for giant
    magnetoresistance (GMR) discovered independently
    in 1988.

This discovery led to development of the spin
valve and later the tunnel magnetoresistance
effect (TMR) which found application in advanced
computer hard drives, and more recently
magneto-resistive random access memory (MRAM)
(which is non-volatile).
13
Giant Magneto-Resistance (GMR)
  • Discovered in 1988 France
  • A multilayer GMR consists of two or more
    ferromagnetic layers separated by a very thin
    (about 1 nm) non-ferromagnetic spacer (e.g.
    Fe/Cr/Fe)
  • When the magnetization of the two outside layers
    is aligned, resistance is low
  • Conversely when magnetization vectors are
    antiparallel, high R

Condition for GMR layer thickness nm
14
Parallel Current GMR
  • Current runs parallel between the ferromagnetic
    layers
  • Most commonly used in magnetic read heads
  • Has shown 200 resistance difference between zero
    point and antiparallel states

15
Perpendicular Current GMR
  • Easier to understand theoretically, think of one
    FM layer as spin polarizer and other as detector
  • Has shown 70 resistance difference between zero
    point and antiparallel states
  • Basis for
  • Tunneling
  • MagnetoResistance

16
Concept of the Giant Magnetoresistance (GMR)
  • 1) Iron layers with opposite magnetizations
    spin up and spindown are stopped ? no current
    (actually small current only)

2) If a magnetic field aligns the magnetizations
spins go through
17
Applications of GMR
It is used in Hard Drives
0.5 MB ? 1975
100 GB hard disc (Toshiba), ? soon in
portable digital audio-players
1997 (before GMR) 1 Gbit/in2 , 2007 GMR heads
300 Gbit/in2
18
Magnetic Tunnel Junction
  • A magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) consists of two
    layers of magnetic metal, such as cobalt-iron,
    separated by an ultrathin layer of insulator.

Ferromagnetic electrodes
  • Tunnel Magnetoresistive effect combines the two
    spin channels in the ferromagnetic materials and
    the quantum tunnel effect

19
Magnetic Tunnel Junction
  • Device

Ferromagnetic leads L R
Insulating spacer S
Parallel alignment (P)
Antiparallel alignment (AP)
Measured tunneling current I, conductance
G Tunneling magneto-resistance (TMR)
20
Applications
  • The read heads of modern hard disk drives.
  • Is also the basis of MRAM, a new type of
    non-volatile memory.

21
Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory
  • MRAM uses magnetic storage elements instead of
    electric used in conventional RAM
  • Tunnel junctions are used to read the information
    stored in Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory,
    typically a 0 for zero point magnetization
    state and 1 for antiparallel state

22
MRAM combines the best characteristics of Flash,
SRAM and DRAM
23
Phases in Spintronics
  • SPIN INJECTION
  • SPIN MANIPULATION
  • SPIN DETECTION

24
Spin injection
  • It is the transport or creating a non-equilibrium
    spin population across interface
  • Using a ferromagnetic electrode
  • Effective fields caused by spin-orbit
    interaction.
  • Tunnel barrier could be used to effectively
    inject spins into a semiconductor
  • Tunneling spin injection via Schottky barrier
  • By hot electrons

25
Spin Manipulation
  • To control electron spin to realize desired
    physical operation efficiently by means of
    external fields
  • Mechanism for spin transfer implies a spin
    filtering process.
  • Spin filtering means that incoming electrons with
    spin components perpendicular to the magnetic
    moment in the ferromagnet are being filtered out.
  • Spin-polarized current can transfer the angular
    momentum from carriers to a ferromagnet where it
    can change the direction of magnetization This
    effect is equivalent to a spin transfer torque.

26
Spin Transfer Torque
S
v
v
The spin of the conduction electron is rotated
by its interaction with the magnetization.
This implies the magnetization exerts a torque on
the spin. By Conservation of angular momentum,
the spin exerts an equal and Opposite torque on
the magnetization.
27
Spin Detection
To measure the physical consequences of spin
coherent states in Spintronics devices.
The injection of non-equilibrium spin either
induces voltage or changes resistance
corresponding to buildup of the non-equilibrium
spin. This voltage can be measured in terms of
change in resistance by potentiometric method.
28
Spin Detection Technique
An ultrasensitive silicon cantilever with a SmCo
magnetic tip positioned 125nm above a silica
specimen containing a low density of unpaired
electron spins. At points in the specimen where
the condition for magnetic resonance is
satisfied, the magnetic force exerted by the spin
on the tip.
29
Materials of Spintronics
Problems
  • Currently used materials in conventional
    electronics are usually non-magnetic and only
    charges are controllable.
  • Existing metal-based devices do not amplify
    signals.
  • Whereas semiconductor based spintronic devices
    could in principle provide amplification and
    serve, in general, as multi-functional devices.
  • All the available ferromagnetic semiconductor
    materials that can be used as spin injectors
    preserve their properties only far below room
    temperature, because their Curie temperatures
    (TC) are low.

30
Spintronic Research and Applications
  • GMR - Giant magnetoresistance - HDD read heads
  • MTJ - Magnetic Tunnel Junction - HDD read
    headsMRAM
  • MRAM - Magnetic RAM - nonvolitile memory
  • STT - Spin Transfer Torque - MRAMoscillator

31
Solution
  • Diluted Magnetic Semiconductor or (DMS).
  • Add Fe or Mn to
  • Si/GaAs
  • Half-Metallic Ferromagnets
  • Fe3O4 magnetite
  • CrO2
  • Heusler FM
  • Ni2MnGa
  • Co2MnAl

32
Diluted Magnetic Semiconductor or (DMS)
One way to achieve FS is to dope some magnetic
impurity in a semiconductor matrix. (Diluted
Magnetic Semiconductor )
33
Various DMS displays room temperature
ferromagnetism!
Science 287, 1019 (2000) PRB 63, 195205 (2001)
Theoretical predictions by Dietl, Ohno et al.
Curie Temperature The temperature above which a
ferromagnetic
material loses its permanent magnetism.
34
DMS materials I (Ga,Mn)As
  • First DMS material, discovered in 1996 by Ohno et
    al.
  • Curie temperature ?? ?? ?????? K at optimal
    doping

Ohno et al., APL 69, 363 (1996)
35
DMS materials II (Ga,Mn)N
Highest Tc in Dietls prediction
  • First room temperature DMS discovered in 2001
  • High curie temperature
  • Experiment up to Tc 800 K
  • Theory up to Tc 940 K

36
DMS materials III Transition metal doped oxide
  • Room temperature ferromagnetism discovered in Mn
    doped ZnO in 2001
  • Material
  • Mn doped ZnO
  • Co doped TiO
  • Reported Tc up to 400K

37
Half-Metallic Ferromagnets
Half metals are ferromagnets with only one type
of conduction electron, either spin up, ?, or
spin down, ?
The valence band related to one type of these
electrons is fully filled and the other is
partially filled. So only one type of electrons
(either spin up or spin down) can pass through it.
38
Half-Metallic Ferromagnets
E.g. Chromium(IV) oxide Fe3O4 magnetite Heusler
alloys
39
Future Outlook
  • High capacity hard drives
  • Magnetic RAM chips
  • Spin FET using quantum tunneling
  • Quantum computers

40
Limitations
  • Problems that all the engineers and scientists
    may have to overcome are
  • To devise economic ways to combine ferromagnetic
    metals and semiconductors in integrated circuits.
  • To find an efficient way to inject spin-polarized
    currents, or spin currents, into a semiconductor.
  • To create long relaxation time for effective spin
    manipulation.
  • What happens to spin currents at boundaries
    between different semiconductors?
  • How long can a spin current retain its
    polarization in a semiconductor?

41
THANK YOU for your kind attention ?
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