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A New Spin on Silicon Chips

A new spintronics device is a key step toward faster, more powerful computers.

By Prachi Patel

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

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Today's computers rely on moving and storing electronic charge in semiconductors. They ignore another property of electrons known as spin. Manipulating an electron's spin, as opposed to manipulating its charge, is faster and takes much less energy. That means electronic circuits that store and process data using an electron's spin would make computers faster, smaller, and more energy efficient.

Spin on a chip: An innovative method to detect electron spin in silicon has led to the first silicon-based spintronics device.
Credit: Jon Cox, University of Delaware

While spintronic devices are easy to make using magnetic metals, to do so using semiconductors is challenging. So far, researchers have made spintronic devices from gallium arsenide, but making them from the far cheaper silicon has been difficult. Ian Appelbaum and his colleagues at the University of Delaware have now made the first silicon-based spintronic device, which they describe in this week's Nature.

Appelbaum says that silicon-based spintronics could be easily incorporated into present-day integrated circuits. Also, theory says that electron spins survive for a long time in silicon.

Electron spins come in two directions: "up" and "down." In conventional charge-based electronics, electrons' spins randomly fluctuate. But in a spintronics device, an up or down spin could represent a "1" or "0".

Some forms of spintronics are already used in computers. For instance, the read heads in high-capacity computer hard drives use a metal-based spintronic device called a spin valve. The valve contains a nonmagnetic metal layer sandwiched between two magnetic layers, one of which has a fixed magnetic-field direction. As the read head travels over the 1s and 0s stored as magnet fields on the disk, the fields in the two magnetic layers flip back and forth, aligning and misaligning. When the magnetic fields are aligned, electrons with spins in the same direction flow through the device, representing a bit 1.

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The trouble with making silicon spintronic devices has been measuring spin direction, says Paul Crowell, who does spintronics research at the University of Minnesota, in Minneapolis. There are ways to inject electrons with aligned spins into silicon, but without being able to measure spin in the material, one can't know whether the electrons maintain their spin in silicon, let alone control their spin. In gallium-arsenide devices, one can use light to measure spin, Crowell says, but this is not possible in silicon, an area in which "one has to fly completely blind."

To detect the spin coming out of silicon, Appelbaum and his colleagues made a detector with a unique layered structure: a nickel-iron layer on top of a copper layer, which is deposited on a silicon substrate.

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