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2004 | Book

Spin Electronics

Editors: David D. Awschalom, Robert A. Buhrman, James M. Daughton, Stephan von Molnár, Michael L. Roukes

Publisher: Springer Netherlands

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About this book

The history of scientific research and technological development is replete with examples of breakthroughs that have advanced the frontiers of knowledge, but seldom does it record events that constitute paradigm shifts in broad areas of intellectual pursuit. One notable exception, however, is that of spin electronics (also called spintronics, magnetoelectronics or magnetronics), wherein information is carried by electron spin in addition to, or in place of, electron charge. It is now well established in scientific and engineering communities that Moore's Law, having been an excellent predictor of integrated circuit density and computer performance since the 1970s, now faces great challenges as the scale of electronic devices has been reduced to the level where quantum effects become significant factors in device operation. Electron spin is one such effect that offers the opportunity to continue the gains predicted by Moore's Law, by taking advantage of the confluence of magnetics and semiconductor electronics in the newly emerging discipline of spin electronics. From a fundamental viewpoine, spin-polarization transport in a material occurs when there is an imbalance of spin populations at the Fermi energy. In ferromagnetic metals this imbalance results from a shift in the energy states available to spin-up and spin-down electrons. In practical applications, a ferromagnetic metal may be used as a source of spin-polarized electronics to be injected into a semiconductor, a superconductor or a normal metal, or to tunnel through an insulating barrier.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Spin Electronics — Is It the Technology of the Future?
Abstract
The future potential of spin electronics in the areas of information storage and ultimately quantum computing has been long recognized. The many approaches current spintronics research is taking, as detailed in this report, bear testament to its future value. Two recent discoveries have rekindled interest in the utility of semiconductors as both sources and carriers of spin information. The first of these, by Awschalom and coworkers (Awschalom and Kikkawa 1999), demonstrated that optically injected spin-polarized carriers maintain their coherence over nanosecond time scales. This means that they can be transported over distances far in excess of tens of micrometers, making the transport of coherent spin information from device to device a practical reality. The second discovery, by Ohno and coworkers in Japan (Ohno et al. 1996), resulted in the fabrication of low concentration Mn substitution in GaAs epilayers with ferromagnetic ordering temperatures in excess of 100K. Other semiconducting materials with TC higher than room temperature are in the offing. Thus the natural integration of spin-sensitive and normal semiconductor functionalities will lead to new opportunities for integrating electronics, magnetics, and photonics into single technologies with multifunctional capabilities.
Stephan von Molnár
Chapter 2. Materials for Semiconductor Spin Electronics
Abstract
A generic spin electronic device consists of a spin injection electrode, an interface, a medium in which coherent, polarized injected spins may be manipulated, and another interface beyond which the coherence and direction of the spins may be detected. Although spin injection and detection have been demonstrated by optical techniques (see Chapter 5) in order to produce an all electronic device, the ferromagnetic injector and detector must be materials having high spin polarization and compatibility with the transporting medium.
Stephan von Molnár
Chapter 3. Fabrication and Characterization of Magnetic Nanostructures
Abstract
Three classes of modern technological advances have greatly invigorated the investigation of magnetism:
  • Heteroepitaxy — which enables the creation of entirely new types of crystalline magnetic alloys and ferromagnetic semiconductors, as well as the definition of extremely high quality interfaces between materials systems
  • Micro- and nanofabrication methods — that allow patterning ferromagnetic materials down to the dimensions of single domain magnetism and the definition of electrical devices exhibiting pronounced “spintronics” phenomena
  • Magnetic imaging — new methods that provide resolution of the local structural and magnetic properties of new materials and devices on the nanometer length scale.
Concerted application of these advances now provides the capability to observe, control, and engineer magnetic phenomena at the nanoscale. This, in turn, is enabling the creation of entirely new magnetic materials and spintronic devices (Wolf et al. 2001; Prinz 1998).
Michael L. Roukes
Chapter 4. Spin Injection, Spin Transport and Spin Transfer
Abstract
The efficient injection of charge carriers having a strong net spin polarization of controllable orientation into nonmagnetic electronic materials, particularly semiconductor device structures, along with the subsequent manipulation and detection of this injected spin polarization, is essential to the successful performance of a wide range of potential spintronics devices. The pioneering spin injection experiment of Johnson and Silsbee (1987), as well as the discovery of the giant magnetoresistance (GMR) effect (Baibich et al. 1988; Barnas et al. 1990) discussed elsewhere in this report, demonstrated over a decade ago that a strong nonequilibrium spin population can be generated in a normal metal by sending a current into it from a ferromagnetic electrode. This approach is effective because the current emanating from a ferromagnetic metal is generally substantially spin-polarized, typically >40% for the transition metal ferromagnets (Soulen et al. 1998; Upadhyay et al. 1998), since the electrical conductivity of its majority (spin up) electrons differs significantly from that of its minority spin (spin down) electrons.
Robert A. Buhrman
Chapter 5. Optoelectronic Manipulation of Spin in Semiconductors
Abstract
In contrast to metals, an additional degree of freedom afforded by semiconductor spintronics allows direct optical access to electronic and nuclear spin states. During the last few years, optical measurements have demonstrated that it is possible to create, manipulate, transport, and store electron spin coherence in a variety of solid state materials. In addition, controlled interactions with nuclear moments via coherent electron spins have suggested the possibility of high density quantum storage at the nuclear level. A number of laboratories have developed research programs aimed at engineering a new generation of optoelectronic devices using a coherent ensemble of long-lived spin states (electron or nuclear) in which the direction or phase of the ensemble can be rapidly manipulated optically or electronically. This offers the potential of high performance optoelectronics, using the Faraday rotation produced by the ensemble, with very high speed optical switches, modulators, encoders, and decoders as candidate devices. The intrinsic speed of these devices may be in the femtosecond regime, and the power required to change the phase may be small if the phase of the spin ensemble can be manipulated by moving it within spin-engineered semiconductor heterostructures having differing g factors.
David D. Awschalom
Chapter 6. Magnetoelectronic Devices
Abstract
Since the discovery of giant magnetoresistance (GMR), magnetoresistive devices have progressed rapidly from the anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) structures that were the dominant thin film magnetoresistive material into the 1990s. GMR development, followed by work in magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJ), is now being amplified by the latest work in spin electronic devices (SPINS). The resulting improvements in magnetoresistance have been accompanied by rapid exploitation of these new structures in sensors, read heads, galvanic isolators, and nonvolatile memory (MRAM). The ultimate drivers for research in magnetoelectronics — that devices be “faster, smaller, and cheaper” — ultimately also define the technological challenges.
James M. Daughton
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Spin Electronics
Editors
David D. Awschalom
Robert A. Buhrman
James M. Daughton
Stephan von Molnár
Michael L. Roukes
Copyright Year
2004
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Electronic ISBN
978-94-017-0532-5
Print ISBN
978-90-481-6513-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-0532-5