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Scientists Image “Magnetic Semiconductors”
On The Nanoscale
In a first-of-its-kind achievement, scientists
at the University of Iowa, the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign and Princeton University have directly
imaged the magnetic interactions between two magnetic
atoms less than one nanometer apart (one billionth of
a meter) and embedded in a semiconductor chip.
The findings, scheduled for publication as the cover
story of the July 27 issue of the journal Nature, bring
scientists one step closer toward realizing the goal
of building a very advanced semiconductor computer chip.
The chip would be based upon a property of the electron
called "spin" and the related technology of
"spintronics," according to Michael Flatté,
professor in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Department of Physics and Astronomy.
"With spintronics, data manipulation and long-term
storage can be conducted in one computer chip, rather
than separately in a CPU and a hard drive as currently
practiced. The data manipulation could also be done
quicker and require less power. Such a computer would
be much smaller in size and use less energy," Flatté
says.
He adds that some 20 years ago, researchers at IBM discovered
that an ordinary semiconducting material, indium arsenide,
could be made magnetic at low temperatures by introducing
a very small number of magnetic atoms. The magnetic
atoms they added were manganese, and soon many other
"magnetic semiconductors" were discovered.
Gallium arsenide, a semiconductor material used for
high-performance devices in cell phones, becomes magnetic
when manganese is added, but only at a temperature of
-88 degrees C (-126 degrees F). In order for it to be
used in future computer chips, magnetic semiconductors
like gallium manganese arsenide must remain magnetic
at higher temperatures and also be made "cleaner,"
or less resistant to current flow.
"Visualizing the magnetic interactions on the nanoscale
may lead to better magnetic semiconductor materials
and applications for them in the electronics industry,"
says Flatté, who along with UI Assistant Research
Scientist Jian-Ming Tang predicted that the magnetic
interactions could be imaged with a scanning tunneling
microscope. "An electron behaves as if it carries
a small magnet around with it. This property, called
"spin," has not been used in computer chips
to date. If the materials are good enough, then new
computer chips that require much less power to run are
possible. Even revolutionary 'quantum computers' that
use strange quantum phenomena of the atomic world to
perform calculations may be possible," says Flatté.
Flatté and Tang had predicted that the magnetic
interactions should depend strongly on where in the
crystal lattice of the semiconductor the atoms were
sitting. Some configurations interacted very strongly
and others very weakly. "We thought it would require
a lot of luck to see this effect. Usually when manganese
is placed in gallium arsenide, it enters the lattice
in many different positions. To see two manganese atoms
within a nanometer of each other, but isolated from
all other manganese, would be statistically very unlikely,"
he says.
Flatté and Tang, theorists, teamed up with experimentalists
Professor Ali Yazdani, Dale Kitchen and Anthony Richardella
to look for these effects. The experimentalists took
a completely different approach toward seeing the magnetic
interactions. Instead of trusting luck to help them
find an arrangement of atoms, they placed the manganese
atoms one at a time into a fresh, clean piece of gallium
arsenide. "Using the tip of a scanning tunneling
microscope, we can take out a single atom from the base
material and replace it with a single metal that gives
the semiconductor its magnetic properties," says
Yazdani, Princeton University physics professor. He
notes that the effort marks the first time that scientists
have achieved this degree of control over the atomic-level
structure of a semiconductor. In essence, the team used
this unique capability to make a semiconductor magnetic,
one atom at a time. "The ability to tailor semiconductors
on the atomic scale is the holy grail of electronics,
and this method may be the approach that is needed,"
says Yazdani.
Kitchen, a researcher in Yazdani's lab, hit upon the
solution while working with a high-tech tool used to
explore complex materials called a scanning tunneling
microscope, a device that operates very differently
from a desktop optical microscope. The device has a
finely-pointed electrical probe that passes over a surface
in order to detect variations with a weak electric field.
The team, however, found that the charged tip could
also be used to eject a single gallium atom from the
surface, replacing it with one of manganese that was
waiting nearby.
By incorporating manganese atoms into the gallium arsenide
semiconductor, the team has created an atomic-scale
laboratory that can reveal what researchers have sought
for decades: the precise interactions among atoms and
electrons in chip materials. The team used their new
technique to find the optimal arrangements for manganese
atoms that enhance the magnetic properties of gallium
manganese arsenide. These arrangements agreed with Flatté
and Tang's predictions. "To predict how a material
will behave, and then have that prediction dramatically
confirmed, as in this experiment, is one of the most
enjoyable experiences of research," says Flatté.
Flatté cautions that further advances will be
required to translate the new research results into
new chip technology and also that using a scanning tunneling
microscope to grow large pieces of high quality gallium
manganese arsenide may not be practical. However, he
says, the lessons learned about optimal arrangements
of magnetic atoms in semiconductors will be transferred
to other semiconductor growth techniques and to other
magnetic semiconductor materials.
The research project was funded in part by the National
Science Foundation and the U.S. Army Research Office.
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