36 research outputs found
Domain walls in spin-valve nanotracks: characterisation and applications
Magnetic systems based on the manipulation of domain walls (DWs) in nanometre-scaled tracks have been shown to store data at high density, perform complex logic operations, and even mechanically manipulate magnetic beads. The magnetic nano-track has also been an indispensable model system to study fundamental magnetic and
magneto-electronic phenomena, such as field induced DW propagation, spin-transfer
torque, and other micromagnetic properties. Its value to fundamental research and the
breath of potentially useful applications have made this class of systems the focus of
wide research in the area of nanomagnetism and spintronics.
This thesis focuses on DW manipulation and DW-based devices in spin-valve
nanotracks. The spin-valve is a metallic multi-layered spintronic structure, wherein the
electrical resistance varies greatly with the magnetisation of its layers. In comparison to
monolayer tracks, the spin-valve track enables more sensitive and versatile
measurements, as well as demonstrating electronic output of DW-based devices, an
achievement of crucial interest to technological applications. However, these multi-layered tracks introduce new, potentially disruptive magnetic interactions, as well as
fabrication challenges.
In this thesis, the DW propagation in spin-valve nanotracks of different compositions
was studied, and a system with DW propagation properties comparable to the state-of-the-art in monolayer tracks was demonstrated, down to an unprecedented lateral size
of 33nm.
Several DW logic devices of variable complexity were demonstrated and studied,
namely a turn-counting DW spiral, a DW gate, multiple DW logic NOT gates, and a DW-DW interactor. It was found that, where the comparison was possible, the overall
magnetic behaviour of these devices was analogous to that of monolayer structures,
and the device performance, as defined by the range of field wherein they function
desirably, was found to be comparable, albeit inferior, to that of their monolayer
counterparts. The interaction between DWs in adjacent tracks was studied and new
phenomena were observed and characterised, such as DW depinning induced by a
static or travelling adjacent DW.
The contribution of different physical mechanisms to electrical current induced
depinning were quantified, and it was found that the Oersted field, typically negligible
in monolayer tracks, was responsible for large variations in depinning field in SV tracks,
and that the strength of spin-transfer effect was similar in magnitude to that reported
in monolayer tracks. Finally, current induced ferromagnetic resonance was measured,
and the domain uniform resonant mode was observed, in very good agreement to
Kittel theory and simulations
18th IEEE Workshop on Nonlinear Dynamics of Electronic Systems: Proceedings
Proceedings of the 18th IEEE Workshop on Nonlinear Dynamics of Electronic Systems, which took place in Dresden, Germany, 26 – 28 May 2010.:Welcome Address ........................ Page I
Table of Contents ........................ Page III
Symposium Committees .............. Page IV
Special Thanks ............................. Page V
Conference program (incl. page numbers of papers)
................... Page VI
Conference papers
Invited talks ................................ Page 1
Regular Papers ........................... Page 14
Wednesday, May 26th, 2010 ......... Page 15
Thursday, May 27th, 2010 .......... Page 110
Friday, May 28th, 2010 ............... Page 210
Author index ............................... Page XII
International Symposium on Magnetic Suspension Technology, Part 1
The goal of the symposium was to examine the state of technology of all areas of magnetic suspension and to review related recent developments in sensors and controls approaches, superconducting magnet technology, and design/implementation practices. The symposium included 17 technical sessions in which 55 papers were presented. The technical session covered the areas of bearings, sensors and controls, microgravity and vibration isolation, superconductivity, manufacturing applications, wind tunnel magnetic suspension systems, magnetically levitated trains (MAGLEV), space applications, and large gap magnetic suspension systems
Wideband vibration energy harvesting using electromagnetic transduction for powering internet of things
The ‘Internet of Things-(IoT)’ envisions a world scattered with physical sensors that collect and transmit data about almost anything and thereby enabling intelligent decision-making for a smart environment. While technological advancements have reduced the power consumption of such devices significantly, the problem of perpetual energy supply beyond the limited capability of batteries is a bottleneck to this vision which is yet to be resolved. This issue has surged the research to investigate the prospect of harvesting the energy out of ambient mechanical vibrations. However, limited applications of conventional resonant devices under most practical environments involving frequency varying inputs, has gushed the research on wideband transducers recently. To facilitate multi-frequency operation at low-frequency regime, design innovations of the Silicon-onInsulator based MEMS suspension systems are performed through multi-modal activation. For continuous bandwidth widening, the benefits of using nonlinear stiffness in the system dynamics are investigated. By topologically varying the spring architectures, dramatically improved operational bandwidth with large power-density is obtained, which is benchmarked using a novel figure-of-merit. However, the fundamental phenomenon of multi-stability limits many nonlinear oscillator based applications including energy harvesting. To address this, an electrical control mechanism is introduced which dramatically improves the energy conversion efficiency over a wide bandwidth in a frequencyamplitude varying environment using only a small energy budget. The underlying effects are independent of the device-scale and the transduction methods, and are explained using a modified Duffing oscillator model. One of the key requirements for fully integrated electromagnetic transducers is the CMOS compatible batch-fabrication of permanent magnets with large energy-product. In the final module of the works, nano-structured CoPtP hard-magnetic material with large coercivity is developed at room-temperature using a current modulated electro-deposition technique. The demagnetization fields of the magnetic structures are minimized through optimized micro-patterns which enable the full integration of high performance electromagnetic energy harvesters
Microelectromechanical Systems and Devices
The advances of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and devices have been instrumental in the demonstration of new devices and applications, and even in the creation of new fields of research and development: bioMEMS, actuators, microfluidic devices, RF and optical MEMS. Experience indicates a need for MEMS book covering these materials as well as the most important process steps in bulk micro-machining and modeling. We are very pleased to present this book that contains 18 chapters, written by the experts in the field of MEMS. These chapters are groups into four broad sections of BioMEMS Devices, MEMS characterization and micromachining, RF and Optical MEMS, and MEMS based Actuators. The book starts with the emerging field of bioMEMS, including MEMS coil for retinal prostheses, DNA extraction by micro/bio-fluidics devices and acoustic biosensors. MEMS characterization, micromachining, macromodels, RF and Optical MEMS switches are discussed in next sections. The book concludes with the emphasis on MEMS based actuators
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Laboratory-directed research and development: FY 1996 progress report
This report summarizes the FY 1996 goals and accomplishments of Laboratory-Directed Research and Development (LDRD) projects. It gives an overview of the LDRD program, summarizes work done on individual research projects, and provides an index to the projects` principal investigators. Projects are grouped by their LDRD component: Individual Projects, Competency Development, and Program Development. Within each component, they are further divided into nine technical disciplines: (1) materials science, (2) engineering and base technologies, (3) plasmas, fluids, and particle beams, (4) chemistry, (5) mathematics and computational sciences, (6) atomic and molecular physics, (7) geoscience, space science, and astrophysics, (8) nuclear and particle physics, and (9) biosciences