Space Industry and Business News  
ENERGY TECH
A New Electronic Structure For Generating Spin Current

Advances in spintronics have already impacted commercial products, enabling a huge increase in storage capacity of magnetic hard disks. However, the devices comprise ferromagnetic multilayers that act as spin filters and require conventional electrical charge currents in order to work. To garner the full potential of spintronics, further fundamental advances are urgently needed.
by Staff Writers
Barcelona, Spain (SPX) Dec 20, 2010
A research team from the Institut Catala de Nanotecnologia (ICN), in Barcelona, has demonstrated a device that induces electron spin motion without net electric currents, a key step in developing the spin computers of the future. The results are published in the journal Science.

The authors are Marius V. Costache and Sergio o. Valenzuela, an ICREA Professor who is leader of the Physics and Engineering of Nanodevices Group at ICN.

Spintronics is a branch of electronics that aims to use the electron spin rather than its charge to transport and store information. The electron spin comes in two forms, "spin up" or "spin down", and would allow significantly more data to be stored and analyzed than is possible with current electronics.

Moreover, spin computers would be able to process vast amounts of information while using less energy and generating much less heat than conventional computers.

Advances in spintronics have already impacted commercial products, enabling a huge increase in storage capacity of magnetic hard disks. However, the devices comprise ferromagnetic multilayers that act as spin filters and require conventional electrical charge currents in order to work. To garner the full potential of spintronics, further fundamental advances are urgently needed.

Researchers working in this field face a key challenge: how to generate and control spins without the simultaneous generation of electric current, and the resultant energy losses? This would enable not just data storage, but calculations to be realized directly using spin states.

As reported in the journal Science, Prof. Valenzuela and Dr. Costache have proposed and experimentally demonstrated a ratchet concept to control the spin motion. In analogy to a ratchet wrench, which provides uniform rotation from oscillatory motion, such ratchets achieve directed spin transport in one direction, in the presence of an oscillating signal.

Most important, this signal could be an oscillatory current that results from environmental charge noise; thus future devices based on this concept could function by gathering energy from the environment.

The efficiency of the ratchet can be very high. Reported results show electron polarizations of the order of 50%, but they could easily exceed 90% with device design improvements. The spin ratchet, which relies on a single electron transistor with a superconducting island and normal metal leads, is able to discriminate the electron spin, one electron at a time.

The devices can also function in a "diode" regime that resolves spin with nearly 100% efficacy and, given that they work at the single-electron level, they could be utilized to address fundamental questions of quantum mechanics in the solid state or to help prepare the path for ultrapowerful quantum or spin computers.

The main drawback of the devices is that they work at low temperature. However, this does not represent a problem for quantum computing applications as solid state implementations of quantum computers will most likely require similar working conditions. Future research at the ICN will focus on increasing the spin ratchet efficiency and testing different ratchet protocols to implement a working device at room temperature.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Institut Catala de Nanotecnologia
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ENERGY TECH
Science's Breakthrough of The Year: The First Quantum Machine
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 20, 2010
Until this year, all human-made objects have moved according to the laws of classical mechanics. Back in March, however, a group of researchers designed a gadget that moves in ways that can only be described by quantum mechanics - the set of rules that governs the behavior of tiny things like molecules, atoms, and subatomic particles. In recognition of the conceptual ground their experimen ... read more







ENERGY TECH
Berkeley Researchers Discover Mobius Symmetry In Metamaterials

New Google TV sets facing delays: reports

'iCrime' wave fuelled by insatiable appetite for smartphones

Japan telecom firm KDDI to start e-book distribution

ENERGY TECH
Arianespace Will Orbit Sicral 2 Milcomms Satellites

Codan Receives JITC Certification For 2110 HF Manpack

Northrop Grumman Bids for Marine Corps Common Aviation CnC

DSP Satellite System Celebrates 40 Years

ENERGY TECH
ISRO Set To Launch Heaviest Satellite For Telecom And TV

The Flight Of The Dragon

ISRO To Launch New Satellite On December 20

SpaceX Dragon Does Two Orbits Before Pacific Splashdown

ENERGY TECH
Universal Address And GPS Enhanced Google Maps For iPhones

New GeoGroups App Reinvents Geo-Social Experience

NAVTEQ Expands Global R And D Capabilities

Officials Complete GPS Software Upgrade Ahead Of Schedule

ENERGY TECH
Air Force Flight Control Improvements

Britain's axed Harrier jets take final flight

U.K to halve fast-jets by 2020

NASA Research Park To Host World's Largest, Greenest Airship

ENERGY TECH
S.Korea's Hynix says chip price slump will hit Q4 profit

Iridium Memories

Making Wafers Faster By Making Features Smaller

Taiwan scientists claim microchip 'breakthrough'

ENERGY TECH
Plant Consumption Rising Significantly As Population And Economies Grow

NASA Satellite Data Addresses Needs Of California Growers

Satellites Give An Eagle Eye On Thunderstorms

Unstable Antarctica: What's Driving Ice Loss

ENERGY TECH
New Catalysts Hold Promise For Air Quality

Toxic Toy Crisis Requires Fresh Solutions

Arrests in Greece over disputed waste landfill

US environmentalists sue ExxonMobile over air pollution


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement