Difference in conduction by
electrons with opposite spins in ferromagnetic metals can be precisely
resolved using terahertz waves.
Credit: Copyright MPI-P
Mainz/Aveiro/Bielefeld/Berlin. Modern
magnetic memories, such as hard drives installed in almost every
computer, can store a very large amount of information thanks to very
tiny, nanoscale magnetic sensors used for memory readout. The operation
of these magnetic sensors, called the spin-valves, is based on the
effect of giant magnetoresistance (GMR), for which its inventors Albert
Fert and Peter Gruenberg were awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2007.
The GMR effect is based on the idea of electrical conduction in
ferromagnetic metals, proposed by Sir Nevill F. Mott as early as in
1936. In Mott's picture, the conduction electrons in ferromagnetic
metals experience scattering depending on their microscopic magnetic
moment -- the spin. That is, the electrons with one spin orientation
scatter less and are therefore more conductive than the electrons with
the opposite spin orientation. This spin-asymmetry in electron
conduction is greatly amplified when the thin films of ferromagnetic and
nonmagnetic metals are combined together to form a spin-valve in which
electrical resistivity becomes very sensitive to the magnetic field,
leading to a GMR effect.
Even though the Mott spin-dependent conductivity is at the heart of
magnetic memories and many other technologies, its direct observation
has been a long time challenge. Indeed the fundamental parameters of
Mott conduction -- spin-dependent electron scattering time and
spin-dependent electron density -- can be directly and unambiguously
determined only if the conductivity of the metal is measured on the same
ultrafast timescale at which the electron scattering occurs, that is
sub-100 femtosecond (1 fs = 10-15 s, i.e. one millionth of one billionth
of a second). For many decades, such an extremely fast timescale of
experimental measurement precluded the observation of magnetotransport
in metals on the fundamental level.
In a collaborative work carried out by the research groups at the Max
Planck Institute for Polymer Research (MPI-P) and the Johannes
Gutenberg University (JGU), with the contribution of Sensitec GmbH and
the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, the scientists
managed to break the speed barrier for fundamental magnetotransport
measurements by using a method called ultrafast terahertz spectroscopy
(1 THz = 1012 Hz, i.e. one thousand billion oscillations per second).
"By studying the interaction of THz electromagnetic waves -- which
oscillate about as fast as the electrons in metal scatter their momentum
-- with a spin-valve, we could directly measure for the first time the
fundamental parameters of Mott conduction," explains Dmitry
Turchinovich, project leader at the MPI-P. "In particular, we found that
the traditional measurements performed on the slower timescales
significantly underestimate the spin-asymmetry in electron scattering
which is responsible for the magnetic sensor operation."
The results of the research team: Zuanming Jin, Alexander Tkach,
Frederick Casper, Victor Spetter, Hubert Grimm, Andy Thomas, Tobias
Kampfrath, and Mischa Bonn, led by Dmitry Turchinovich (MPI-P) and
Mathias Klaeui (JGU) have recently been published in Nature Physics.
This work adds a new and powerful tool, ultrafast THz spectroscopy,
to the studies in spintronics, opening up a new research field --
terahertz spintronics.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.