Light polarizes silicon nuclear 
spins within a silicon carbide chip. This image portrays the nuclear 
spin of one of the atoms shown in the full crystal lattice below.
Credit: Courtesy of Peter Allen
 
An electronics technology that uses the
 "spin" -- or magnetization -- of atomic nuclei to store and process 
information promises huge gains in performance over today's 
electron-based devices. But getting there is proving challenging.
Now researchers at the University of Chicago's Institute for 
Molecular Engineering (IME) have made a crucial step toward nuclear 
spintronic technologies. They have gotten nuclear spins to line 
themselves up in a consistent, controllable way, and they have done it 
using a high-performance material that is practical, convenient, and 
inexpensive.
"Our results could lead to new technologies like ultra-sensitive 
magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear gyroscopes, and even computers that 
harness quantum mechanical effects," said Abram Falk, the lead author of
 the report on the research, which was featured as the cover article of 
the June 17 issue of Physical Review Letters. Falk and colleagues in 
David Awschalom's IME research group invented a new technique that uses 
infrared light to align spins. And they did so using silicon carbide 
(SiC), an industrially important semiconductor.
Nuclear spins tend to be randomly oriented. Aligning them in a 
controllable fashion is usually a complicated and only marginally 
successful proposition. The reason, explains Paul Klimov, a co-author of
 the paper, is that "the magnetic moment of each nucleus is tiny, 
roughly 1,000 times smaller than that of an electron."
This small magnetic moment means that little thermal kicks from 
surrounding atoms or electrons can easily randomize the direction of the
 nuclear spins. Extreme experimental conditions such as high magnetic 
fields and cryogenic temperatures (-238 degrees Fahrenehit and below) 
are usually required to get even a small number of spins to line up. In 
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), for example, only one to 10 out of a 
million nuclear spins can be aligned and seen in the image, even with a 
high magnetic field applied.
Using their new technique, Awschalom and his associates aligned more 
than 99 percent of spins in certain nuclei in silicon carbide (SiC). 
Equally important, the technique works at room temperature -- no 
cryogenics or intense magnetic fields needed. Instead, the research team
 used light to "cool" the nuclei.
While nuclei do not themselves interact with light, certain 
imperfections, or "color-centers," in the SiC crystals do. The electron 
spins in these color centers can be readily optically cooled and 
aligned, and this alignment can be transferred to nearby nuclei. Had the
 group tried to achieve the same degree of spin alignment without 
optical cooling they would have had to chill the SiC chip physically to 
just five millionths of a degree above absolute zero (-459.6 degrees 
Fahrenheit).
Getting spins to align in room-temperature silicon carbide brings 
practical spintronic devices a significant step closer, said Awschalom, 
the Liew Family Professor in Spintronics and Quantum Information. The 
material is already an important semiconductor in the high-power 
electronics and opto-electronics industries. Sophisticated growth and 
processing capabilities are already mature. So prototypes of nuclear 
spintronic devices that exploit the IME researchers' technique may be 
developed in the near future. Said Awschalom: "Wafer-scale quantum 
technologies that harness nuclear spins as subatomic elements may appear
 more quickly than we anticipated." -- Carla Reiter
Funding and support: Air Force Office of Scientific Research, 
National Science Foundation, Knut & Alice Wallenberg Foundation, 
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and Sweden's National Supercomputer 
Center.
    
       
           
      
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