News News
Contact us
  • Customer service number:64321087
  • Commercial service telephone:13918059423
  • Technical service telephone:13918059423
  • Contact person: Mr. Cui 
  • Service email:shxtb@163.com
  • Address: room 107, building 8, no. 100, guilin road, xuhui district, Shanghai

Accelerating Write/Erase Cycles In All-Optical Magnetization Switching

The date of: 2022-04-06
viewed: 0

source:Eurasiareview


According to an estimate of IBM the current daily production of digital information exceeds 2.5 quintillion bytes (equivalent to about 50 million of dual-layer Blu-ray discs, which stacked on top of each other would be 60 km high) and continues to grow at a staggering rate.

The vast majority of this data is stored magnetically, where a binary bit, 0 or 1, corresponds to opposite magnetization directions, and is nowadays typically written or erased by current-driven electromagnets. As this process poses fundamental limitations with regards to speed and energy efficiency, the discovery of all-optical switching (AOS) allowing to set the magnetization direction only using light pulses – and hence to write or erase a magnetic bit – is hailed as an exciting new approach for future data storage technology.

AOS has been observed in magnetic materials containing rare-earth elements and transition metals, e.g. in ferrimagnetic GdFe alloy. Here, optical excitation with femtosecond laser pulses leads to a very rapid heating of the electrons to well above the Curie temperature and a corresponding loss of the magnetization within the magnetic material. Exchange of spin angular momentum between the two elements Gd and Fe can then promote reversal of the respective magnetization.

Importantly, the temperature of the atomic lattice is only very moderately increased, making AOS intrinsically energy efficient. While this process has been extensively studied, both theoretically and experimentally, only little is known about the maximal frequencies of write/erase cycles using subsequent laser pulses, crucial for the success of AOS in future data devices.

Scientists from the Max Born Institute and the Freie Universität Berlin followed two strategies to minimize the temporal separation of two consecutive femtosecond laser pulses to toggle the out-of-plane direction of the magnetization of such rare-earth transition metal alloys. First, by systematically changing the heat transfer rates using amorphous glass, crystalline silicon or polycrystalline diamond substrates below the alloy, it was demonstrated that efficient cooling rates of the magnetic system present a prerequisite to accelerate the sequence of write/erase cycles. Second and more importantly, replacing the transition metal iron by cobalt lead to a significantly faster recovery of the (switched) magnetization after optical excitation. The comparison of the ultrafast magnetization dynamics of a GdFe and GdCo alloy after single pulse excitation is shown in Fig. 1a). While the initial demagnetization is very similar, the relaxation rate to a reversed magnetic state is vastly different.

While GdCo reverses its magnetization to 60% within 5 ps, in GdFe the same value is reached only after approximately 200 ps. The researchers rationalized this observation by the stronger Co-Co vs. Fe-Fe exchange interaction leading to a faster magnetic ordering of the transition metal sublattice. The respective results of the double pulse experiments for GdCo are shown in Fig. 1b and c: magneto-optical images display the opposite magnetization direction of the final state for a pulse-to-pulse separation of only Δt12=7 ps. In b) the fluence of the second pulse, F2, is insufficient to influence the magnetization set by the first pulse. In c) F2 is increased and the magnetization is successfully switched back.

To the best of the team’s knowledge, this presents the fastest sequence of magnetization reversal to date, approaching terahertz repetition rates for write/erase cycles of magnetic bits.



Hot News / Related to recommend
  • 2025 - 11 - 06
    Click on the number of times: 0
    来源:mining.comUS-based rare earth developer Critical Metals (Nasdaq: CRML) has moved another step closer to the start of mining at its Tanbreez project in southern Greenland after securing key environm...
  • 2025 - 11 - 03
    Click on the number of times: 1
    来源:mining.comMalaysia will maintain a ban on the export of raw rare earths to protect its domestic resources, despite signing a critical minerals deal with the United States this week, the trade minis...
  • 2025 - 11 - 03
    Click on the number of times: 0
    来源:mining.comRare earths firm REalloys has received a letter of interest from the US Export-Import Bank (EXIM) for a loan worth up to $200 million to fund processing and magnet facilities, in what wou...
  • 2025 - 10 - 29
    Click on the number of times: 2
    来源:mining.comEuropean Council President Antonio Costa said on Monday that high-level officials from China were scheduled to visit Brussels in the coming weeks to discuss Beijing’s export curbs on rare...
  • Copyright ©Copyright 2018 2020 Shanghai rare earth association All Rights Reserved Shanghai ICP NO.2020034223
    the host:Shanghai Association of Rare Earth the guide:Shanghai Development and Application Office of Rare Earth the organizer:Shanghai rare earth industry promotion center
    犀牛云提供云计算服务