More and more, we’re talking about the post-silicon era as silicon-based microelectronic components reach the theoretical limit of available sizes. Recently, physicists from Russia and Europe have demonstrated the real possibility of using superconductor/ferromagnet systems to create magnonic crystals, which will be at the core of spin-wave devices.
Magnonics investigates the possibilities of using spin waves to transmit and process information. Whereas photonics deals with photons and electromagnetic waves, the focus of magnonics is on spin waves, or magnons, which are harmonic oscillations of the orientation of magnetic moments. In ferromagnetic materials, the magnetic moments or spins of the electrons are aligned in a magnetic field. The waves of spin alignment observed in a magnetic system are called spin waves.
Magnonics is seen as a promising research area in post-silicon wave electronics, as spin waves have a number of advantages over, say, microwave photons. For instance, spin waves can be controlled by an external magnetic field. Microwaves, which are essentially electromagnetic waves, have an average wavelength of one centimeter, whereas spin waves in the same microwave frequency range have wavelengths of micrometers. This is why these controllable waves can be used to build very compact microdevices for microwave signals.
Magnonic crystals are the most fundamental systems (sometimes referred to as the building blocks) required to build a device that operates using spin wave signals. These crystals have a wide range of potential applications and will lie at the heart of frequency filters, grating couplers, waveguides, and magnonic devices, which are analogs of transistors.
The researchers tested their basic hypothesis, which was as follows: Can a magnonic crystal be created using a ferromagnet/superconductor hybrid system? Ferromagnetism and superconductivity are two antagonistic phenomena. In a superconductor, the spins of the electrons bound into a Cooper pair are oriented in opposite directions, whereas in ferromagnets, they tend to align in the same direction. Scientists have traditionally tried to influence superconducting properties with ferromagnetism.
“The last couple of years, we have been successful in achieving the reverse. First, we examine ferromagnetic systems and see if their ferromagnetic properties can somehow be modified using superconductors. This is why it has attracted global interest,” explains Dr. Igor Golovchanskiy, a researcher at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.
“Initially, magnonics included only room-temperature investigations. Therefore, hybridization of ferromagnets with superconductors, which do not exist at room temperature, was out of the question. Besides, ferromagnetism has traditionally been considered ‘stronger’ than superconductivity and, hence, can’t be influenced by it. Our laboratory studies cryogenic systems, and we set ourselves a goal to look at how magnonic systems behave at cryogenic temperatures when they are forced to interact with superconductors.”
The main result of this research is that the scientists have proved it possible to work with magnonic crystals using the superconductor/ferromagnet hybrid system. The scientists have also observed a peculiar magnonic band structure in their architecture characterized by the presence of forbidden bands in the gigahertz frequency range.
The research was conducted in three stages: a sample was fabricated and measured, and then simulations were performed. The system consisted of regular superconducting niobium (Nb) structure placed on top of a ferromagnetic Ni80Fe20 permalloy (Py) thin film.
The system was placed in a cryostat, and the microwave signal transmission coefficient was measured. If the value was the same as the fundamental frequencies of the system, resonance absorption was observed. This is called ferromagnetic resonance. The obtained spectrum showed two lines, indicating that the periodic structure consisted of two bound areas with alternating ferromagnetic resonance conditions. The ferromagnetic properties were modulated by means of the superconducting structure.
During the third stage, “micromagnetic simulations” were performed. This helped the researchers recreate the magnonic band structure, which is formed by allowed and forbidden bands with a different geometry.
The technological process of the development of silicon-based microelectronic components is reaching the theoretical limit of available sizes. As a result, a further increase in computational capacity, and hence the continued miniaturization of components, requires new approaches. In this regard, the investigated superconductor/ferromagnet systems offer good prospects for wave electronics, since the critical sizes for superconducting materials are less than a micrometer. Therefore, it is possible to make superconducting elements very small.
The researchers believe their results will find use in microwave electronics and magnonics, including the field of quantum magnonics. However, the range of potential applications is still limited as the system cannot survive at room temperature.