Showing posts with label Karsten Rode. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karsten Rode. Show all posts

Friday, November 4, 2016

AMBER-led consortium awarded over €4.4 million in highly competitive European funding program


Professor Plamen Stamenov, Investigator in AMBER and Trinity College Dublin's School of Physics.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2016-11/ac-aca110416.php
A recognition of truly excellent science with radically new technological possibilities to enable wireless data transfer at unprecedented speeds
Trinity researchers at the AMBER centre, the Science Foundation Ireland funded materials science centre, will lead an international project worth over €4.4 million under the European-funded "Future and Emerging Technologies - Open" (FET Open) programme. They are the first group in Ireland ever to coordinate such a project, from the most competitive science funding programme in the EU. FET Open funds visionary research and innovation for radically new future technologies, at an early stage, when there are few researchers working in a field. The success rate for this call was 4%.* Trinity's share of the 4.4m euro budget is 1.7m euro.
The funding has been awarded to the TRANSPIRE project, which is led by Professor Plamen Stamenov, an Investigator in AMBER and Trinity's School of Physics, working with Drs Karsten Rode, Thomas Archer and Professors Michael Coey and Stefano Sanvito (all from the School of Physics), and collaborators in Germany, Norway and Switzerland. TRANSPIRE (Terahertz RAdio communication using high aNistropy SPIn torque REsonators), which came about from an initial collaboration between Trinity and the Materials Research Institute at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) in Germany, will develop a new class of magnetic materials that could enable new, on-chip and chip-to-chip data links at least 100 times, possibly 1000 times faster than current technology. Personal and substance security screening, medical spectrometry and imaging, geophysical and atmospheric research and the Internet of Things will all benefit from ultra-fast data transfer.
Professor Plamen Stamenov, Investigator in AMBER and Trinity's School of Physics, said, "We are, of course, delighted to win this award. It is a recognition of the work we have done on the fundamental physics of highly spin-polarised materials over the last 5-10 years, but also of the quality and expertise of our collaborators in Germany, Norway and Switzerland. I trust that this project will be valued by the scientific community and hope that we will be laying the foundations for high-speed data networks of the future. TRANSPIRE aims to develop a new class of magnetic materials which should enable new and exciting terahertz, that is 1000 gigahertz, technologies. As the different forms of radio communication and navigation e.g. AM and FM radio, digital TV, microwave devices, mobile phones, GPS and wireless networks, all fight for space in the heavily-regulated frequency bands, the changes in their capacity is relatively slow and incremental. With the huge increase in the demand for high-speed data transmission, these radio bands are experiencing intense pressure. The terahertz bands offer new opportunities and some unchartered 'territory', but are rather difficult to work at. In this range, to date, no magnetic materials and correspondingly devices have been developed. Our ambition within TRANSPIRE is to start the development of a low-cost, compact and reliable, room-temperature terahertz technology which could underpin the next wave of the Big Data revolution."
Professor Michael Morris, Director of AMBER, said, "I congratulate Prof Stamenov and his team. This places AMBER researchers amongst the best in Europe. FET Open will only fund scientists that have the capability of conducting research that goes beyond what is currently known or even imagined and we look forward to the developments with this project".
Professor Mark Ferguson, Director General of Science Foundation Ireland and Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government of Ireland, said, "This is a recognition of truly excellent science by Professor Stamenov and the team at AMBER. The Science Foundation Ireland Research Centres have ambitious targets of securing non-exchequer funding and AMBER has been very successful in reaching its targets to date."

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

OT-New class of zero-moment half metallic magnets may enhance data storage, wireless transmission speeds

http://phys.org/news/2015-03-class-zero-moment-metallic-magnets-storage.html

Attempting to develop a novel type of permanent magnet, a team of researchers at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland has discovered a new class of magnetic materials based on Mn-Ga alloys

Described as a zero-moment half metal this week in the journal Applied Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing, the new Mn2RuxGa magnetic alloy has some unique properties that give it the potential to revolutionize data storage and significantly increase  speeds.

The discovery realizes a goal researchers have sought for several decades: to make a material with no net , but full spin polarization. Having no magnetic moment—essentially a measure of the net strength of a magnet—frees the material from its own demagnetizing forces and means that it creates no stray magnetic fields. Zero moment also means being immune to the influence of any , unlike conventional ferromagnets. As a result, there would be no radiation losses during magnetic switching of the material, which occurs as data is read or written, for instance. This property, coupled with full spin polarization means that the material should be extremely efficient in spintronics - the electronics of magnetized electrons.
Furthermore, it promises to shift the ferromagnetic resonance frequency, the maximum speed at which data is written or retrieved, into the low terahertz range. This range is currently of great interest for fast data transmission, but it is unexploited since it is difficult to make effective, yet reasonably-priced emitters and detectors that operate at such extremely high frequencies.
Though scientists have long recognized the merits of such a 'zero-moment half metal', nobody has been able to synthesize one. Several have been proposed through the years, but none of them delivered this combination of properties.
Now the Trinity College team, led by Michael Coey, studying spin-dependent transport properties of Mn2RuxGa (MRG) thin-films as a function of the Ru concentration, developed a zero-moment half metal free from demagnetizing forces that created no stray fields, essentially removing two of the obstacles to integrating magnetic elements in densely packed, nanometer-scale memory elements, and millimeter-wave generators.
The secret was in combining the Manganese with the Ruthenium, said Karsten Rode, a co-author on the new paper.
"Mn is in the Goldilocks zone - the magnetic coupling of the electrons is neither too strong nor too weak - just right," he said. "Ruthenium plays a critical role since without any Ru, even if one were able to crystallize the alloy in the right structure, the electronic bands contributing to the conduction would be only slightly spin polarized."
Building a better magnet
The solution the Trinity College team came up with was to design a material such that the moments of two inequivalent, oppositely aligned magnetic Mn sublattices perfectly compensated for one another—essentially cancelling each other out and giving no net moment. But, in a simplified picture, only one of these sublattices actually carries current—so that the result was a 100 percent spin polarized current with no net magnetic moment.
The development of this new material required a delicate balance. Spin-polarized current is due to the coupling of electrons in localized magnetic states (d-states) with mobile electrons in current-carrying states (s-states). If this coupling is too strong in a two-sublattice system, the spin polarization of the mobile carriers in the material tends to average to zero, but on the other hand, if the coupling is too weak, only a small fraction of the s-like electrons are spin polarized, and this would result in a very low spontaneous Hall effect. It is the spontaneous Hall effect that provides one piece of evidence of the spin polarization at room temperature.
Rode explained that the Manganese in the material was key to achieving this breakthrough because it allowed them to create a highly spin-polarized band of s-like electrons, yet keeping the  weak enough to allow for one of the spin bands to be pushed away from the Fermi level where all the conduction takes place. The addition by Ruthenium of both electrons and extra electronic states was also key because that made it possible to achieve zero net moment.
"The most difficult part was to understand that our new material was truly special," said Rode. "Our first experimental results could have been dismissed as a weakly-anisotropic ferrimagnet of no particular interest. Once we realized that there was a possibility that we could achieve full compensation of the magnetic moments, coupled with a large , we started checking to see if the 'zero-moment half metal' hypothesis would stand intense scrutiny - and it did."
Now that the first example of this new type of magnet has been developed, the team will work to realize its benefits. "We need to demonstrate the spintronic functionality in a practical device" Rode said. "This is challenging for a Mn-based alloy. The manganese is easily oxidized and this has to be avoided in a fully-functional thin-film device stack. But now that we think we understand the conditions necessary to create a zero-moment half metal, it is likely that MRG will not long remain an only child."
 Explore further: Scientists resolve spin puzzle
More information: "Giant spontaneous Hall effect in zero-moment Mn2RuxGa," by Naganivetha Thiyagarajah, Yong-Chang Lau, Davide Betto, Kiril Borisov, J. M. D. Coey, Plamen Stamenov and Karsten Rode, Applied Physics Letters, Tuesday, March 24, 2015. DOI: 10.1063/1.4913687