125 research outputs found

    Controlled skyrmion nucleation in extended magnetic layers using a nanocontact geometry

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    We propose and numerically simulate a spintronic device layout consisting of a nanocontact on top of an extended Co/Pt bilayer. The interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in such bilayer systems can lead to the possible existence of metastable skyrmions. A small dc current injected through the nanocontact enables the manipulation of the size as well as the annihilation of an initially present skyrmion, while ps-long current pulses allow for the controlled nucleation of single skyrmions underneath the nanocontact. The results are obtained from micromagnetic simulations and can be potentially used for future magnetic storage implementations

    An Intelligent Trade Matching System for B2B Marketplace

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    With the fast growth of B2B sales, an intelligent system is greatly useful for decreasing transaction cost and increasing market efficiency on electronic platforms. In order to improve the quality of transaction processing and customer experience, this paper proposes a knowledge-based system, which employs a Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) technique for trade matching in B2B marketplace as a substitute for the manual matching process. The system function and logical architecture are discussed. And the case repository is proposed to support this CBR approach where the case representation, case base indexing, case base decomposition and the dictionary are argued in details

    Neural Architecture Search for Compressed Sensing Magnetic Resonance Image Reconstruction

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    Recent works have demonstrated that deep learning (DL) based compressed sensing (CS) implementation can accelerate Magnetic Resonance (MR) Imaging by reconstructing MR images from sub-sampled k-space data. However, network architectures adopted in previous methods are all designed by handcraft. Neural Architecture Search (NAS) algorithms can automatically build neural network architectures which have outperformed human designed ones in several vision tasks. Inspired by this, here we proposed a novel and efficient network for the MR image reconstruction problem via NAS instead of manual attempts. Particularly, a specific cell structure, which was integrated into the model-driven MR reconstruction pipeline, was automatically searched from a flexible pre-defined operation search space in a differentiable manner. Experimental results show that our searched network can produce better reconstruction results compared to previous state-of-the-art methods in terms of PSNR and SSIM with 4-6 times fewer computation resources. Extensive experiments were conducted to analyze how hyper-parameters affect reconstruction performance and the searched structures. The generalizability of the searched architecture was also evaluated on different organ MR datasets. Our proposed method can reach a better trade-off between computation cost and reconstruction performance for MR reconstruction problem with good generalizability and offer insights to design neural networks for other medical image applications. The evaluation code will be available at https://github.com/yjump/NAS-for-CSMRI.Comment: To be appear in Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphic

    Directional Spin Wave in Spin-Torque Oscillators Induced by Interfacial Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya Interaction

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    Spin torque oscillators (STOs) are currently of great interest due to its wide tunable frequencies, low energy consumption and high quality factors compared with traditional oscillators. Here, we report the characteristics of the nanocontact-(NC-)STO in the presence of interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI), using micromagnetic simulations. We find that the DMI can decrease the STO frequency by around 2 GHz. More importantly, the DMI is able to break the isotropy of the spin-wave spectrum and turn the emitted microwave into directional spin-wave beams potentially facilitating the synchronization of multiple STOs

    Magnetic domain wall engineering in a nanoscale permalloy junction

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    Nanoscale magnetic junctions provide a useful approach to act as building blocks for magnetoresistive random access memories (MRAM), where one of the key issues is to control the magnetic domain configuration. Here, we study the domain structure and the magnetic switching in the Permalloy (Fe20Ni80) nanoscale magnetic junctions with different thicknesses by using micromagnetic simulations. It is found that both the 90-° and 45-° domain walls can be formed between the junctions and the wire arms depending on the thickness of the device. The magnetic switching fields show distinct thickness dependencies with a broad peak varying from 7 nm to 22 nm depending on the junction sizes, and the large magnetic switching fields favor the stability of the MRAM operation

    Eliminating Non-linear Raman Shift Displacement Between Spectrometers via Moving Window Fast Fourier Transform Cross-Correlation

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    Obtaining consistent spectra by using different spectrometers is of critical importance to the fields that rely heavily on Raman spectroscopy. The quality of both qualitative and quantitative analysis depends on the stability of specific Raman peak shifts across instruments. Non-linear drifts in the Raman shifts can, however, introduce additional complexity in model building, potentially even rendering a model impractical. Fortunately, various types of shift correction methods can be applied in data preprocessing in order to address this problem. In this work, a moving window fast Fourier transform cross-correlation is developed to correct non-linear shifts for synchronization of spectra obtained from different Raman instruments. The performance of this method is demonstrated by using a series of Raman spectra of pharmaceuticals as well as comparing with data obtained by using an existing standard Raman shift scattering procedure. The results show that after the removal of shift displacements, the spectral consistency improves significantly, i.e., the spectral correlation coefficient of the two Raman instruments increased from 0.87 to 0.95. The developed standardization method has, to a certain extent, reduced instrumental systematic errors caused by measurement, while enhancing spectral compatibility and consistency through a simple and flexible moving window procedure

    Probing the Buried Magnetic Interfaces

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    Understanding magnetism in ferromagnetic metal/semiconductor (FM/SC) heterostructures is important to the development of the new-generation spin field-effect transistor. Here, we report an element-specific X-ray magnetic circular dichroism study of the interfacial magnetic moments for two FM/SC model systems, namely, Co/GaAs and Ni/GaAs, which was enabled using a specially designed FM<sub>1</sub>/FM<sub>2</sub>/SC superstructure. We observed a robust room temperature magnetization of the interfacial Co, while that of the interfacial Ni was strongly diminished down to 5 K because of hybridization of the Ni d­(e<sub>g</sub>) and GaAs sp<sup>3</sup> states. The validity of the selected method was confirmed by <i>first-principles</i> calculations, showing only small deviations (<0.02 and <0.07 μ<sub>B</sub>/atom for Co/GaAs and Ni/GaAs, respectively) compared to the real FM/SC interfaces. Our work proved that the electronic structure and magnetic ground state of the interfacial FM<sub>2</sub> is not altered when the topmost FM<sub>2</sub> is replaced by FM<sub>1</sub> and that this model is applicable generally for probing the buried magnetic interfaces in the advanced spintronic materials.

    Element-specific spin and orbital moments and perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in Ta/CoFeB/MgO structures

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    Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) in the Ta/CoFeB/MgO system has been studied using x-ray magnetic circular dichroism and vibrating sample magnetometry. The ratios of the orbital to spin magnetic moments of Co atoms in the Ta/CoFeB/MgO structures with PMA have been found to be enhanced by 100%, compared with the Ta/CoFeB/Ta structure without PMA. The orbital moments of Co are as large as 0.30 μ B, more than half of their spin moments in the perpendicularly magnetized Ta/CoFeB/MgO structures. The results indicate that the PMA observed in the CoFeB/MgO structures is related to the increased spin-orbital coupling of the Co atoms. This work offers experimental evidence of the correlation between PMA and the element-specific spin and orbital moments in the Ta/CoFeB/MgO systems
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