Periodic Reporting for period 3 - MAGSHAKE (Shaken and stirred: Terahertz electric field control of magnetism)
Período documentado: 2023-01-01 hasta 2024-06-30
MAGSHAKE project aims to pave the way towards a memory device characterized by very low energy consumption and switching times of one trillionth of a second. To this end we employ short pulses of electro-magnetic radiation at a terahertz (THz) frequency (i.e. thousand times faster than that in current data communication and processing standards). These pulses are made from light particles (photons), with their energies naturally matching those of elementary quantum magnets, ‘spins’. These are used to store information in common magnetic hard disk drives. Hence, such THz photons can excite spins on their own energy scale without releasing any significant heat into the surrounding medium. We are investigating various magnetic materials and tailor the light pulses to find the most promising platform for the ultimately fast and energy efficient magnetic recording.
The ever-growing demand for efficient magnetic data processing calls for novel means to manipulate the magnetic state and manipulating the exchange interaction would be the most efficient and ultimately fastest way to control magnetism. In the course of the MAGSHAKE project we have demonstrated the ultrafast control of the exchange interaction using three different mechanisms and experimental methods.
Firstly we developed an ultrafast magnetometer – a device, which is able to trace the dynamics of spins with less that a trillionth of a second resolution. This is much faster than the temporal resolution of modern electronics. By systematically varying the colour of the excitation laser pulses from red to blue, we were able to identify the light wavelength, for which the effect of light on magnetism is the strongest.
In the second experiment, we used light to optically stimulate specific atomic vibrations of the magnet’s crystal lattice, which extensively disturbed and distorted the structure of the material. After shaking the crystal for a very short period of time, we measured how the strength of the exchange interaction evolve directly in time. We were able to switch the spin alignment of the magnet by 90 degrees.
In the third experiment we looked at the common magnetic alloy of iron and rhodium (FeRh) which exhibits a transition in both its structure and magnetism when heated just above room temperature. Upon the interaction with the material, the laser pulse raised the temperature by a few hundred degrees Celsius at timescales shorter than a billionth of a second. We used the novel double pump time-resolved spectroscopy technique. We employed two laser pulses for double pumping: while the first laser pulse serves as ultrafast heater, the second one helps in generating electric field. By detecting this field at multiple time-lapses between the two laser pulses, we were able to look how fast the magnetization emerges in the material.
Rather unexpectedly, we discovered the novel way to generate and detect magnetic waves that propagate through the material at a speed much faster than the speed of sound. These so-called spin waves produce a lot less heat than conventional electric currents, making them promising candidates for future computation devices with significantly reduced power consumption.