麻豆淫院

October 14, 2010

UC Riverside physicists pave the way for graphene-based spin computer

Atomically-thin insulating barriers greatly improve spin injection into graphene. Top image shows flow of electrons (dotted line) when no insulator is used. Flow of electron spin polarization is greatly improved (bottom image) when a magnesium oxide insulator is used as shown. Image credit: Kawakami lab, UC Riverside.
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Atomically-thin insulating barriers greatly improve spin injection into graphene. Top image shows flow of electrons (dotted line) when no insulator is used. Flow of electron spin polarization is greatly improved (bottom image) when a magnesium oxide insulator is used as shown. Image credit: Kawakami lab, UC Riverside.

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- 麻豆淫院icists at the University of California, Riverside have taken an important step forward in developing a "spin computer" by successfully achieving "tunneling spin injection" into graphene.

An electron can be polarized to have a directional orientation, called 鈥渟pin.鈥 This spin comes in two forms 鈥 are said to be either 鈥渟pin up鈥 or 鈥渟pin down鈥 鈥 and allows for more data storage than is possible with current electronics.

Spin computers, when developed, would utilize the electron鈥檚 spin state to store and process vast amounts of information while using less energy, generating less heat and performing much faster than conventional computers in use today.

Tunneling spin injection is a term used to describe conductivity through an insulator. , brought into the limelight by this year鈥檚 Nobel Prize in physics, is a single-atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms arrayed in a honeycomb pattern. Extremely strong and flexible, it is a good conductor of electricity and capable of resisting heat.

鈥淕raphene has among the best spin transport characteristics of any material at room temperature,鈥 explained Roland Kawakami, an associate professor of physics and astronomy, who led the research team, 鈥渨hich makes it a promising candidate for use in spin computers. But electrical spin injection from a ferromagnetic electrode into graphene is inefficient. An even greater concern is that the observed spin lifetimes are thousands of times shorter than expected theoretically. We would like longer spin lifetimes because the longer the lifetime, the more computational operations you can do.鈥

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To address these problems, in the lab Kawakami and colleagues inserted a nanometer-thick insulating layer, known as a 鈥渢unnel barrier,鈥 in between the ferromagnetic electrode and the graphene layer. They found that the spin injection efficiency increased dramatically.

鈥淲e found a 30-fold increase in the efficiency of how spins were being injected by quantum tunneling across the insulator and into graphene,鈥 said Kawakami, who is also a member of UC Riverside鈥檚 Center for Nanoscale Science and Engineering. 鈥淓qually interesting is that the insulator was operating like a one-way valve, allowing electron flow in one direction 鈥 from the electrode to graphene 鈥 but not the other. The insulator helps to keep the injected spin inside the graphene, which is what leads to high spin injection efficiency. This counterintuitive result is the first demonstration of tunneling spin injection into graphene. We now have world record values for spin injection efficiency into graphene.鈥

Study results appear this week in .

In their experiments, the Kawakami lab also made an unexpected discovery that explains short spin lifetimes of electrons in graphene that have been reported by other experimental researchers.

Kawakami explained that spin lifetimes are typically investigated through an experiment, known as a Hanle measurement, which uses a ferromagnetic spin detector to monitor the electron spins in graphene as they change direction in an external magnetic field. When his team placed a tunnel barrier in between the ferromagnetic spin detector and the graphene, the spin lifetime from the Hanle measurement jumped up to about 500 picoseconds (compared to typical values of 100 picoseconds) even though the researchers did nothing different to the graphene itself.

鈥淧eople usually assume that the Hanle measurement accurately measures the spin lifetime, but this result shows that it severely underestimates the spin lifetime when the ferromagnet is touching the graphene,鈥 said Wei Han, the first author of the research paper and a graduate student in Kawakami鈥檚 lab. 鈥淭his is good news because it means the true spin lifetime in graphene must be longer than reported previously 鈥 potentially a lot longer.鈥

Kawakami explained that, theoretically, graphene has the potential for extremely long spin lifetimes.

鈥淭his lifetime could be microseconds long,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 long lifetime is a special property of graphene, making it a very attractive material for a spin computer.鈥

Growing insulating barriers on graphene is neither a simple nor easy process. The insulator tends to form clumps on the graphene sheet, due in part to graphene鈥檚 reluctance to form strong bonds with materials. To circumvent the problem of clumping, in their experiments the Kawakami team layered the graphene sheet with titanium (about half an atom thick) using a method called molecular beam epitaxy. The titanium layer, the researchers found, prevented the insulator from clumping on graphene or sliding off it.

Next in the research, the Kawakami lab plans to demonstrate a working logic device.

Provided by University of California, Riverside

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