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Magnet-free chiral nanowires for spintronic devices
by Staff Writers
San Sebastian, Spain (SPX) Mar 19, 2022

illustration only

Chiral materials are an ideal playground for exploring the relation between symmetry, relativistic effects, and electronic transport. For instance, chiral organic molecules have been intensively studied to electrically generate spin-polarized currents in the last decade, but their poor electronic conductivity limits their potential for applications.

Conversely, chiral inorganic materials such as Tellurium have excellent electrical conductivity, but their potential for enabling the electrical control of spin polarization in devices remains unclear.

In this recently publish work, it was shown that the orientation of the electrically generated spin polarization is determined by the nanowire handedness and uniquely follows the current direction, while its magnitude can be manipulated by an electrostatic gate. This was found by recording a large (up to 7%) and chirality-dependent unidirectional magnetoresistance.

The Nanodevices group at nanoGUNE is focused in researching the electronic properties of systems in reduced dimensions, and is a worldwide leading group in the field of spintronics.

Ikerbasque Profesor Luis Hueso, leader of the Nanodevices group describes the excitement of the research group when analyzing the results of the experiments: "It has been amazing to perfectly identify the nanowires formed by right- or left-handed Tellurium chains thanks to the high-resolution STEM images, and to transfer individually selected nanowires onto Si/SiO2 in order to carry out the transport experiments that made us discover that the current induced spin polarization is reversed for opposite nanowire handedness".

Research Report: "Gate-tuneable and chirality-dependent charge-to-spin conversion in tellurium nanowires"


Related Links
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Nano Technology News From SpaceMart.com


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UK chip designer Arm cuts jobs after takeover collapse
London (AFP) March 15, 2022
Semiconductor designer Arm plans to axe up to 15 percent of staff, it said Tuesday, after Japanese owner SoftBank failed to offload the subsidiary to US chip giant Nvidia. Arm, located in the English university city of Cambridge, said the proposed cuts from a global workforce of more than 6,000 comes after Nvidia last month scrapped a blockbuster $40-billion takeover following regulatory objections. "If the proposals go ahead, we anticipate that around 12-15 percent of people in Arm would be aff ... read more

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