SUPERMINT is an ambitious project exploring the interaction between some of the most ground-breaking recent discoveries in spintronics and superconductivity. SUPERMINT explores the interplay between chirality, spin texture and superconductivity. In the age of big data and the ongoing artificial intelligence revolution, there is an ever-growing need for large-scale storage and computing capabilities, which are highly energy-intensive. Spin-based technologies, such as magnetic random-access memory (MRAM) and magnetic Racetrack Memory (RTM), consume significant energy because spin currents are typically generated from electrical currents. In contrast, one of the unique features of superconductors is the dissipationless flow of supercurrents, meaning little to no energy is lost when current passes through superconducting materials. However, since the ground state of conventional superconductors is formed from spin-singlet Cooper pairs, magnetism and superconductivity are generally incompatible with one another. There has long been interest, however, in exotic superconducting materials where the spins in Cooper pairs align parallel to one another, allowing supercurrents to carry a net spin angular momentum.
A key objective of SUPERMINT is to leverage recent discoveries to create all the superconducting components required to develop SUPERTRACK—a high-performance, low-energy, non-volatile memory device that operates at cryogenic temperatures. In SUPERTRACK, digital data will be stored in a magnetic nanowire, much like in magnetic Racetrack Memory, but the writing, reading, and movement of magnetic bits will be driven by superconducting phenomena. SUPERMINT aims to achieve fundamental breakthroughs in our understanding of exotic superconductors, particularly in controlling spin direction and utilizing spin-polarized triplet supercurrents to manipulate the magnetic moments of nanoscale magnetic objects.