Brightsurf Science News and Current Science News Events
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Dartmouth researchers discover chromium's hidden magnetic talents

Dartmouth researchers discover chromium's hidden magnetic talents

April 17, 2008

HANOVER, NH - Two Dartmouth researchers have determined that the element chromium displays electrical properties of magnets in surprising ways. This finding can be used in the emerging field of "spintronics," which might someday contribute to new and more energy efficient ways of processing and storing data.

The study, titled "Electrical effects of spin density wave quantization and magnetic domain walls in chromium," will be published in the April 17 issue of the journal Nature.




Electrons have an intrinsic angular momentum, called spin, in addition to their electrical charge. In electronics work, it is the charge of the electron that is used for calculations and transmitting information. In spintronics, it is the electron spin that is exploited.

"The phenomena that we have discovered are likely to lead to new applications of chromium," says Yeong-Ah Soh, the lead researcher on the paper and an associate professor of physics and astronomy at Dartmouth. She worked on the study with Ravi Kummamuru, a former post-doctoral research associate at Dartmouth now at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne.

She goes on to explain that in essence, this indicates that a simple and well-known element, chromium, displays different electrical properties on heating and cooling. These differences reflect subtle internal rearrangements of the electrons and their spins.

In ferromagnets, the kind of common magnet you might see on a refrigerator, the spins of electrons interact with each other leading to alignment. In antiferromagnets, however, the interactions between neighboring electron spins are such that they are opposed. Researchers have long studied the electrical properties of ferromagnets and the influence of electron spin. Less attention has been paid, according to Soh and Kummamuru, to the influence of spin on the electrical properties in antiferromagnets, where it is more difficult to manipulate, and chromium is special since it is the only simple element that is an antiferromagnet.

"Antiferromagnets are used in numerous fields: physics, materials science, and chemistry, and they are increasingly used in technology, where they are found in the tiny heads that read the data on computer disc drives," says Soh. "Our research opens the entire new field of controlled electrical effects at a slightly-larger-than-quantum scale in antiferromagnets. The findings show that not only ferromagnets can be used in spintronics; there is a possibility that antiferromagnets can also be employed to manipulate and store information."

Dartmouth College



Related Antiferromagnets News Articles
Imaging quantum entanglement
An international team including scientists from the London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN) today publishes findings in the journal 'Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences' (PNAS) demonstrating the dramatic effects of quantum mechanics in a simple magnet.

Probing a rare material spin state at NIST
A team of international physicists that includes researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has found experimental evidence of a highly sought-after type of arrangement of atomic magnetic moments, or spins, in a series of materials.

Magnetic 'handedness' could lead to better magnetic storage devices
Better magnetic storage devices for computers and other electronics could result from new work by researchers in the United States and Germany.

X-ray holograms expose secret magnetism
Collaborative research between scientists in the UK and USA has led to a major breakthrough in the understanding of antiferromagnets, published in this week's Nature.
More Antiferromagnets News Articles
Microwave magnon-phonon interactions in ferromagnets and antiferromagnets,
by F. R Morgenthaler

Nuclear magnetic resonance in ferro- and antiferromagnets
by E. A Turov

Harmonic generation using antiferromagnets in the far-infrared (Technical note)
by R Hornreich

Electron resonance studies of critical fluctuations in antiferromagnets
by Jerome Francis Siebert



Ising-type Antiferromagnets: Model Systems in Statistical Physics and in the Magnetism of Exchange Bias (Springer Tracts in Modern Physics)
by Christian Binek

The book deals with selected modern aspects of artificially layered structures and bulk materials involving antiferromagnetic long-range order. Special emphasis is laid on the prototypical behavior of Ising-type model systems. They play a crucial role in the field of statistical physics and, in addition, contribute to the basic understanding of the exchange bias phenomenon in MBE-grown magnetic...

Theory of the two-sublattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet (NASA TN)
by Edwin G Wintucky

Magneto-Optics and Spectroscopy of Antiferromagnets
by V.V. Eremenko, N.F. Kharchenko, Yu.G. Litvinenko, V.M. Naumenko

Certain magnetic materials have optical properties that make them attractive for a wide variety of applications such as optical switches. This book describes the physics of one class of such magnetooptic materials, the insulating antiferromagnets. The authors summarize recent results concerning the structure, optical properties, spectroscopy, and magnetooptical properties of these materials. In...

Magnetic and Magnetoelastic Properties of Antiferromagnets and Superconductors
by V.V. Eremenko, V.A. Sirenko

Magnetostriction in ferromagnets and antiferromagnets (Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Physics. Thesis. 1977. Ph. D)
by Robert Daniel Yacovitch

Nuclear magnetic resonance in ferro- and antiferromagnets,
by E. A Turov

© 2008 BrightSurf.com