39 research outputs found
Spin transfer switching of spin valve nanopillars using nanosecond pulsed currents
Spin valve nanopillars are reversed via the mechanism of spin momentum
transfer using current pulses applied perpendicular to the film plane of the
device. The applied pulses were varied in amplitude from 1.8 mA to 7.8 mA, and
varied in duration within the range of 100 ps to 200 ns. The probability of
device reversal is measured as a function of the pulse duration for each pulse
amplitude. The reciprocal pulse duration required for 95% reversal probability
is linearly related to the pulse current amplitude for currents exceeding 1.9
mA. For this device, 1.9 mA marks the crossover between dynamic reversal at
larger currents and reversal by thermal activation for smaller currents
Large T1 contrast enhancement using superparamagnetic nanoparticles in ultra-low field MRI
Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) are widely investigated and utilized as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast and therapy agents due to their large magnetic moments. Local field inhomogeneities caused by these high magnetic moments are used to generate T2 contrast in clinical high-field MRI, resulting in signal loss (darker contrast). Here we present strong T1 contrast enhancement (brighter contrast) from SPIONs (diameters from 11 nm to 22 nm) as observed in the ultra-low field (ULF) MRI at 0.13 mT. We have achieved a high longitudinal relaxivity for 18 nm SPION solutions, r1 = 615 s−1 mM−1, which is two orders of magnitude larger than typical commercial Gd-based T1 contrast agents operating at high fields (1.5 T and 3 T). The significantly enhanced r1 value at ultralow fields is attributed to the coupling of proton spins with SPION magnetic fluctuations (Brownian and Néel) associated with a low frequency peak in the imaginary part of AC susceptibility (χ”). SPION-based T1-weighted ULF MRI has the advantages of enhanced signal, shorter imaging times, and iron-oxidebased nontoxic biocompatible agents. This approach shows promise to become a functional imaging technique, similar to PET, where low spatial resolution is compensated for by important functional information
Adjusting magnetic nanostructures for high-performance magnetic sensors
The magnetic properties of the soft ferromagnetic layer in magnetic tunnel junctions are one of key factors to determine the performance of magnetoresistance sensors. We use a three-step orthogonal annealing procedure to modify the nanostructures of the free layer in the magnetic tunnel junction to control features such as magnetization reversal, coercivity, exchange field, and tunnel magnetoresistance ratio. We present a sensor with an improved sensitivity as high as 3944%/mT. This magnetic sensor only dissipates 200 lW of power while operating under an applied voltage of 1V
Accuracy, repeatability, and interplatform reproducibility of T1 quantification methods used for DCEâ MRI: Results from a multicenter phantom study
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142505/1/mrm26903_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142505/2/mrm26903.pd
High-Speed Dynamics, Damping, and Relaxation Times in Submicrometer Spin-Valve Devices
The dynamical response of spin-valve devices with line widths of 0.8 m has been measured after excitation with 160 ps magnetic impulses. The devices show resonant frequencies of 2 to 4 GHz which determine the upper limit of their operation frequency. The dynamical response can be fit with LandauLifshitz models to extract an effective uniform-mode damping constant, a um . The measured values of a um were between 0.04 and 0.01 depending on the magnitude of the longitudinal bias field. The appropriate damping coefficient for use in micromagnetic modeling, amm , was extracted from the dynamical response with large longitudinal bias field. This value was used to model the switching of a 0.1 m x 1.0 m magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM) cell. The micromagnetic model included shape disorder that is expected to be found in real devices. The simulations showed that, while the magnetization reverses rapidly (< 0.5 ns), it took several nanoseconds for the energy to be removed from the ma..