18 research outputs found
Study of High Frequency Magnetisation Dynamics in Artificial Nanomagnets Using Micromagnetic Simulation and Spin Wave Spectroscopy
Artificial spin ice (ASI) is a metamaterial comprised of magnetic nanoislands arranged in a square or hexagonal lattice. ASI has been proposed as a reconfigurable magnonic crystal to be used in spin-wave based computing technologies. It also shares the necessary properties required for hardware-based neural networks, namely, nodes connected in a non-linear network via dipole-dipole interactions and memory capacity. In order to utilise these materials for future devices the collective magnetisation dynamics need to be explored. The frequency response can be tuned via shape anisotropy modification with differential patterning, microstate control or external magnetic field magnitude and orientation. Ferromagnetic resonance (FMR), spin-wave spectroscopy and micromagnetic simulations are used to investigate these systems. Control of the shape anisotropy by modifying the length and width of the elements in each sub-lattice of ASI can alter the magnetisation dynamics, suppress or allow modes and provide routes to microstates not practically feasible in homogeneous systems. Symmetry breaking in ASI via patterning causes degeneracy lifting and allows fingerprinting of underlying microstate using FMR which is relatively easier and quicker compared to other microstate reading techniques such as scanning probe or x-ray dichromism and can be integrated into future device designs. The effect of mode shifting due to changes in local field distributions is also discussed which is a sought after property in the field of magnonics. A one-dimensional reconfigurable magnonic crystal (1D-RMC) that can be placed in any desired microstate via topological magnetic defect injection is investigated. The system is prepared in various different microstates and spin-wave propagation is characterised. The spin-wave dispersion can be controlled by changing the pitch of reversed nanoislands. We also propose a spin-wave diode design based on these findings which may be an essential component in spin-wave based computing schemes
Spectral fingerprinting: microstate readout via remanence ferromagnetic resonance in artificial spin ice
Artificial spin ices (ASIs) are magnetic metamaterials comprising geometrically tiled strongly-interacting nanomagnets. There is significant interest in these systems spanning the fundamental physics of many-body systems to potential applications in neuromorphic computation, logic, and recently reconfigurable magnonics. Magnonics focused studies on ASI have to date have focused on the in-field GHz spin-wave response, convoluting effects from applied field, nanofabrication imperfections (‘quenched disorder’) and microstate-dependent dipolar field landscapes. Here, we investigate zero-field measurements of the spin-wave response and demonstrate its ability to provide a ‘spectral fingerprint’ of the system microstate. Removing applied field allows deconvolution of distinct contributions to reversal dynamics from the spin-wave spectra, directly measuring dipolar field strength and quenched disorder as well as net magnetisation. We demonstrate the efficacy and sensitivity of this approach by measuring ASI in three microstates with identical (zero) magnetisation, indistinguishable via magnetometry. The zero-field spin-wave response provides distinct spectral fingerprints of each state, allowing rapid, scaleable microstate readout. As artificial spin systems progress toward device implementation, zero-field functionality is crucial to minimize the power consumption associated with electromagnets. Several proposed hardware neuromorphic computation schemes hinge on leveraging dynamic measurement of ASI microstates to perform computation for which spectral fingerprinting provides a potential solution
Reconfigurable Training and Reservoir Computing in an Artificial Spin-Vortex Ice via Spin-Wave Fingerprinting
Strongly-interacting artificial spin systems are moving beyond mimicking
naturally-occurring materials to emerge as versatile functional platforms, from
reconfigurable magnonics to neuromorphic computing. Typically artificial spin
systems comprise nanomagnets with a single magnetisation texture: collinear
macrospins or chiral vortices. By tuning nanoarray dimensions we achieve
macrospin/vortex bistability and demonstrate a four-state metamaterial
spin-system 'Artificial Spin-Vortex Ice' (ASVI). ASVI can host Ising-like
macrospins with strong ice-like vertex interactions, and weakly-coupled
vortices with low stray dipolar-field. Vortices and macrospins exhibit
starkly-differing spin-wave spectra with analogue-style mode-amplitude control
and mode-frequency shifts of df = 3.8 GHz.
The enhanced bi-textural microstate space gives rise to emergent physical
memory phenomena, with ratchet-like vortex training and history-dependent
nonlinear fading memory when driven through global field cycles. We employ
spin-wave microstate fingerprinting for rapid, scaleable readout of vortex and
macrospin populations and leverage this for spin-wave reservoir computation.
ASVI performs linear and non-linear mapping transformations of diverse input
signals as well as chaotic time-series forecasting. Energy costs of machine
learning are spiralling unsustainably, developing low-energy neuromorphic
computation hardware such as ASVI is crucial to achieving a zero-carbon
computational future
Ultrastrong Magnon-Magnon Coupling and Chiral Symmetry Breaking in a 3D Magnonic Metamaterial
Strongly-interacting nanomagnetic arrays are ideal systems for exploring the
frontiers of magnonic control. They provide functional reconfigurable platforms
and attractive technological solutions across storage, GHz communications and
neuromorphic computing. Typically, these systems are primarily constrained by
their range of accessible states and the strength of magnon coupling phenomena.
Increasingly, magnetic nanostructures have explored the benefits of expanding
into three dimensions. This has broadened the horizons of magnetic microstate
spaces and functional behaviours, but precise control of 3D states and dynamics
remains challenging.
Here, we introduce a 3D magnonic metamaterial, compatible with
widely-available fabrication and characterisation techniques. By combining
independently-programmable artificial spin-systems strongly coupled in the
z-plane, we construct a reconfigurable 3D metamaterial with an exceptionally
high 16N microstate space and intense static and dynamic magnetic coupling. The
system exhibits a broad range of emergent phenomena including ultrastrong
magnon-magnon coupling with normalised coupling rates of and magnon-magnon cooperativity up to C = 126.4, GHz
mode shifts in zero applied field and chirality-selective magneto-toroidal
microstate programming and corresponding magnonic spectral control
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Current-controlled nanomagnetic writing for reconfigurable magnonic crystals
Abstract: Strongly-interacting nanomagnetic arrays are crucial across an ever-growing suite of technologies. Spanning neuromorphic computing, control over superconducting vortices and reconfigurable magnonics, the utility and appeal of these arrays lies in their vast range of distinct, stable magnetization states. Different states exhibit different functional behaviours, making precise, reconfigurable state control an essential cornerstone of such systems. However, few existing methodologies may reverse an arbitrary array element, and even fewer may do so under electrical control, vital for device integration. We demonstrate selective, reconfigurable magnetic reversal of ferromagnetic nanoislands via current-driven motion of a transverse domain wall in an adjacent nanowire. The reversal technique operates under all-electrical control with no reliance on external magnetic fields, rendering it highly suitable for device integration across a host of magnonic, spintronic and neuromorphic logic architectures. Here, the reversal technique is leveraged to realize two fully solid-state reconfigurable magnonic crystals, offering magnonic gating, filtering, transistor-like switching and peak-shifting without reliance on global magnetic fields
Reading the biomineralized book of life: expanding otolith biogeochemical research and applications for fisheries and ecosystem-based management
Chemical analysis of calcified structures continues to flourish, as analytical and technological advances enable researchers to tap into trace elements and isotopes taken up in otoliths and other archival tissues at ever greater resolution. Increasingly, these tracers are applied to refine age estimation and interpretation, and to chronicle responses to environmental stressors, linking these to ecological, physiological, and life-history processes. Here, we review emerging approaches and innovative research directions in otolith chemistry, as well as in the chemistry of other archival tissues, outlining their value for fisheries and ecosystem-based management, turning the spotlight on areas where such biomarkers can support decision making. We summarise recent milestones and the challenges that lie ahead to using otoliths and archival tissues as biomarkers, grouped into seven, rapidly expanding and application-oriented research areas that apply chemical analysis in a variety of contexts, namely: (1) supporting fish age estimation; (2) evaluating environmental stress, ecophysiology and individual performance; (3) confirming seafood provenance; (4) resolving connectivity and movement pathways; (5) characterising food webs and trophic interactions; (6) reconstructing reproductive life histories; and (7) tracing stock enhancement efforts. Emerging research directions that apply hard part chemistry to combat seafood fraud, quantify past food webs, as well as to reconcile growth, movement, thermal, metabolic, stress and reproductive life-histories provide opportunities to examine how harvesting and global change impact fish health and fisheries productivity. Ultimately, improved appreciation of the many practical benefits of archival tissue chemistry to fisheries and ecosystem-based management will support their increased implementation into routine monitoring.[GRAPHICS]
Reading the biomineralized book of life: expanding otolith biogeochemical research and applications for fisheries and ecosystem-based management
AbstractChemical analysis of calcified structures continues to flourish, as analytical and technological advances enable researchers to tap into trace elements and isotopes taken up in otoliths and other archival tissues at ever greater resolution. Increasingly, these tracers are applied to refine age estimation and interpretation, and to chronicle responses to environmental stressors, linking these to ecological, physiological, and life-history processes. Here, we review emerging approaches and innovative research directions in otolith chemistry, as well as in the chemistry of other archival tissues, outlining their value for fisheries and ecosystem-based management, turning the spotlight on areas where such biomarkers can support decision making. We summarise recent milestones and the challenges that lie ahead to using otoliths and archival tissues as biomarkers, grouped into seven, rapidly expanding and application-oriented research areas that apply chemical analysis in a variety of contexts, namely: (1) supporting fish age estimation; (2) evaluating environmental stress, ecophysiology and individual performance; (3) confirming seafood provenance; (4) resolving connectivity and movement pathways; (5) characterising food webs and trophic interactions; (6) reconstructing reproductive life histories; and (7) tracing stock enhancement efforts. Emerging research directions that apply hard part chemistry to combat seafood fraud, quantify past food webs, as well as to reconcile growth, movement, thermal, metabolic, stress and reproductive life-histories provide opportunities to examine how harvesting and global change impact fish health and fisheries productivity. Ultimately, improved appreciation of the many practical benefits of archival tissue chemistry to fisheries and ecosystem-based management will support their increased implementation into routine monitoring.
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Recommended from our members
Current-controlled nanomagnetic writing for reconfigurable magnonic crystals
Abstract: Strongly-interacting nanomagnetic arrays are crucial across an ever-growing suite of technologies. Spanning neuromorphic computing, control over superconducting vortices and reconfigurable magnonics, the utility and appeal of these arrays lies in their vast range of distinct, stable magnetization states. Different states exhibit different functional behaviours, making precise, reconfigurable state control an essential cornerstone of such systems. However, few existing methodologies may reverse an arbitrary array element, and even fewer may do so under electrical control, vital for device integration. We demonstrate selective, reconfigurable magnetic reversal of ferromagnetic nanoislands via current-driven motion of a transverse domain wall in an adjacent nanowire. The reversal technique operates under all-electrical control with no reliance on external magnetic fields, rendering it highly suitable for device integration across a host of magnonic, spintronic and neuromorphic logic architectures. Here, the reversal technique is leveraged to realize two fully solid-state reconfigurable magnonic crystals, offering magnonic gating, filtering, transistor-like switching and peak-shifting without reliance on global magnetic fields
Ultrastrong magnon-magnon coupling and chiral spin-texture control in a dipolar 3D multilayered artificial spin-vortex ice
Abstract Strongly-interacting nanomagnetic arrays are ideal systems for exploring reconfigurable magnonics. They provide huge microstate spaces and integrated solutions for storage and neuromorphic computing alongside GHz functionality. These systems may be broadly assessed by their range of reliably accessible states and the strength of magnon coupling phenomena and nonlinearities. Increasingly, nanomagnetic systems are expanding into three-dimensional architectures. This has enhanced the range of available magnetic microstates and functional behaviours, but engineering control over 3D states and dynamics remains challenging. Here, we introduce a 3D magnonic metamaterial composed from multilayered artificial spin ice nanoarrays. Comprising two magnetic layers separated by a non-magnetic spacer, each nanoisland may assume four macrospin or vortex states per magnetic layer. This creates a system with a rich 16 N microstate space and intense static and dynamic dipolar magnetic coupling. The system exhibits a broad range of emergent phenomena driven by the strong inter-layer dipolar interaction, including ultrastrong magnon-magnon coupling with normalised coupling rates of Δ f ν = 0.57 , GHz mode shifts in zero applied field and chirality-control of magnetic vortex microstates with corresponding magnonic spectra