Scientific News Computers, Internet, Software, Household and Office Equipment New computer technologies PLASTIC SHOWS PROMISE FOR SPINTRONICS, MAGNETIC COMPUTER MEMORY
PLASTIC SHOWS PROMISE FOR SPINTRONICS, MAGNETIC
COMPUTER MEMORY
Researchers at Ohio State University and their
colleagues have expanded the possibilities for a new kind of electronics, known
as spintronics.
Though spintronics technology has yet to be
fully developed, it could result in computers that store more data in less
space, process data faster, and consume less power. It could even lead to
computers that “boot up” instantly, said Arthur
J. Epstein, professor of physics
and chemistry
and director of Ohio State's Center
for Materials Research.
Spintronics uses magnetic fields to control
the spin of electrons. In the current issue of the journal Advanced
Materials, Epstein and his coauthors
report using a magnetic field to make nearly all the moving electrons inside a
sample of plastic spin in the same direction, an effect called spin
polarization. Achieving spin polarization is the first step in converting the
plastic into a device that could read and write spintronic data inside a working
computer.
What’s unique about this work is that the
researchers achieved spin polarization in a polymer, which offers several
advantages over silicon and gallium arsenide -- the traditional materials for
electronics.
Epstein and long-time collaborator Joel
S. Miller, professor of chemistry at the University
of Utah, co-authored the paper with Vladimir N.
Prigodin, a research specialist; Nandyala
P. Raju, a research associate; and Konstantin I.
Pokhodynya, a visiting researcher, all of Ohio State.
Since the mid 1980s, Epstein and Miller have been
developing plastic electronics, most recently a plastic magnet that conducts
electricity. Epstein characterized this latest project as part of a natural
progression of their work toward spintronics.
“Electronics and magnetism have transformed
modern society,” said Epstein. “The advent of plastic electronics opens up
many opportunities for new technologies such as flexible displays and
inexpensive solar cells.”
“With this latest study, we’ve now shown that
we can make all of the components that go into spintronics from plastics,”
Epstein continued. “So it is timely to bring all these components together to
make plastic spintronics.”
Current efforts to develop spintronics with
traditional inorganic semiconductors have been stymied by the fact that most
such materials aren’t magnetic, except at very low temperatures. Creating a
cryogenically cold environment inside a hot computer interior -- where
temperatures reach up to 120 F (50 C) -- would be expensive. Plus, any cooling
equipment would take up precious real estate inside a small device.
That’s why the Ohio State and Utah researchers
chose a plastic called vanadium tetracyanoethanide. The material exhibits
magnetic qualities at high temperatures, even above the boiling point of water
(212 F, 100 C), so it could possibly function inside a computer without special
cooling equipment.
Why are researchers so interested in spintronics?
Normal electronics encode computer data based on a binary code of ones and
zeros, depending on whether an electron is present in a void within the
material. But in principle, the direction of a spinning electron -- either
“spin up” or “spin down” -- can be used as data, too. So spintronics
would effectively let computers store and transfer twice as much data per
electron.
Another bonus: once a magnetic field pushes an
electron into a direction of spin, it will keep spinning the same way until
another magnetic field causes the spin to change. This effect can be used to
very quickly access magnetically stored information during computer operation --
even if the electrical power to a computer is switched off between uses. Data
can be stored permanently, and is nearly instantly available anytime, no lengthy
“boot up” needed.
Plastic spintronics would weigh less than
traditional electronics and cost less to manufacture, Epstein said. Today’s
inorganic semiconductors are created through multiple steps of vacuum deposition
and etching. Theoretically, inexpensive ink-jet technology could one day be used
to quickly print entire sheets of plastic semiconductors for spintronics.
Using plastic may solve another problem currently
faced by developers: spinning electrons must be able to move smoothly between
different components. But traveling from one material to another can sometimes
knock an electron off-kilter. Data encoded in that electron’s spin would be
lost.
For this reason, Epstein, Miller, and their
colleagues are working on transferring spinning electrons through a layered
stack of different magnetic and non-magnetic polymers.
The U.S.
Department of Energy and the Army
Research Office supported this work.
#
Contact: Arthur J. Epstein, (614) 292-1133;
Epstein.2@osu.edu
Written by Pam Frost Gorder, (614) 292-9475; Gorder.1@osu.edu
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Ohio
State University
Publishing date: October 2, 2002
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