TERASWITCH - Towards low dissipation THz-induced switching of magnetic materials

Lead Research Organisation: Sheffield Hallam University
Department Name: College of Business, Technology & Eng

Abstract

Magnetisation switching between two stable bit states (1 and 0) is the key principle of modern-day storage technology. With the explosion in the number of "always connected" devices, and the consumer desire for multimedia and social media content, the volume of data being stored and processed globally has risen at an unprecedented rate, as evidenced by the number of new data centres being built (e.g. Facebook's new data centre in Singapore). The vast quantities of data being generated globally is leading to the emergence of new markets with companies exploiting and trading data in diverse ways - an EU estimate values the digital economy in Europe will be worth 739bn euros by 2020[1]. This growing demand for data storage poses several big questions: where is this volume of data going to be stored? How can the growing demand for data storage and processing be made compatible with the political and social imperative for energy responsibility and, ideally, carbon neutrality? It is estimated that 20% of the world's electricity demand will be used to power data centres by 2025[2], a figure that will undoubtedly grow, and therefore any technology that reduces the energy requirements of data processing and storage is of great national and international importance. This proposal concerns research into reducing the energy use involved in data storage and processing.

Magnetic hard disk drives still form most of the data storage at the server (and hence cloud) level due to their low cost per bit. However, the process of writing information in disk drives uses a relatively large amount of energy due to the magnetic field needed to toggle bits between the two states. Studies in ultrafast magnetization dynamics using femtosecond (1 femtosecond is one millionth of a billionth of a second) laser pulses have demonstrated that low-energy switching is possible, using orders of magnitude less energy. Switching in these studies occurs within two picoseconds (one picosecond is a thousandth of a billionth of a second) opening up the possibility of writing up to 10^12 (a million million) bits per second, one thousand times faster than conventional recording methods, an extremely attractive avenue to realise much faster and more responsive devices that requires research investment. However, the use of strong laser pulses often results in a large amount of heating and can excite a lot of non-linear dynamics. One possible solution to this is to use light at frequencies that are in the THz range with high intensities. Historically, it has been very difficult to generate such light pulses, but recent experimental developments have made this possible and the area of THz science in general has attracted significant attention over the past decade and more recently to control magnetism. Initial studies have shown that significantly lower amounts of energy are required to switch the magnetisation state than in conventional recording, which could revolutionise the way we store and process information. This proposal is aimed at developing these ideas with the goal of understanding the underlying physical processes and how we can engineer efficient, low energy control of magnetism. The work will be carried out alongside world-leading experimental groups to provide important validation and comparisons with theoretical work.

1 - https://ec.europa.eu/digital-single-market/en/news/final-results-european-data-market-study-measuring-size-and-trends-eu-data-economy

2 - https://data-economy.com/data-centres-world-will-consume-1-5-earths-power-2025/

Planned Impact

The outlined project will form a first step towards realising a leading research activity that has the potential to deliver high impact research that will drive the next generation of high frequency, low-powered storage and data processing devices. The current high demand for online multimedia content, social networking and other cloud-based technologies is one of the many causes of rising energy demands. Whilst there has been a push globally to replace the burning of fossil fuels with cleaner energies, there is still a long way to go to ensure that CO2 levels are controlled to limit the effects of global warming. With the number of always connected devices set to increase, the amount of computing power and storage required will inevitably continue to rise, exasperating some of these issues. Hence, new ways of storing and processing information that use significantly less energy than current technologies would have a huge impact on this energy demand. This proposal will identify the physical mechanisms and material properties that give rise to low-energy THz switching. Such research has the potential to lead to large social, environmental and economic impacts. In the medium-to-long term, engagement with industry will be sought as a key pathway to impact through funded schemes such as regional Knowledge Transfer Partnerships and Industrial Strategy Challenge funds.

A key objective is to develop a strong research activity in the field of THz-induced dynamics that is capable of setting the agenda for ultrafast science in the coming years. By developing state-of-the-art theoretical models, the work proposed will have a strong impact on the research community by providing key insight into experimental and other theoretical works. There are currently no research groups working on theoretical modelling of THz-induced spin dynamics and, given the increasing interest in this field, this makes this proposal and the setting up of a research group and activity in this area, crucial and timely for the development of a competitive and much needed research presence in the UK. A joint workshop on ultrafast spin dynamics, with a dedicated session on THz dynamics, will be organised as part of the Current Research in Magnetism (CRIM) series, that is typically organised by the Institute of Physics Magnetism working group. The proposal of such a joint meeting is supported by the working group and will be an excellent opportunity to bring together UK academics working in the field to discuss future avenues of research. The coordinators of the EPSRC-funded EXTREMAG ultrafast time-resolved user facility will be invited to provide information and update the community on the capabilities and activities of the facility.

The staff working on this project will receive tailored training from the PI and Sheffield Hallam as well as through the knowledge transfer from the Scientific Computing Department at STFC Daresbury Laboratory. The training of a broad range of skills will enable the PhD student and PDRA to become independent researchers in their own right and have transferrable skills applicable to a highly technical industry or academia.

The project will involve software development that will be made publicly available. A further key goal for this activity is to initially develop a user base of scientists to use the developed code for modelling magnetisation dynamics with direct input from ab-initio calculations. The longer term goal is to develop an automated and highly accurate multiscale package capable of describing the equilibrium and dynamic properties of any magnetic material that could be applicable to many areas of magnetism research. One clear pathway to enable this is through the PI's membership of CCP-Magnetism and STFC's involvement in CCP9 (the UK's main network dealing with electronic structure theory), with organised schools/workshops and flagship proposals to develop the code capabilities.
 
Description We have developed the first model of antiferromagnets (a type of high frequency magnetic material) that accurately accounts for how the magnetic order changes on very fast timescales after being stimulated by intense laser pulses with frequencies in the visible or terahertz wavelengths and at arbitrary temperatures. This development is an important new tool for modelling in the area of magnetism and magnetic materials and will provide insight into a wide range of experimental scenarios for scientists working magnetism.

We have also performed state of the art calculations on technologically relevant antiferromagnetic materials that have revealed important insight into the electronic structure of these materials. Previous studies have failed to capture this information - we believe our results provide the most accurate picture yet.

The PDRA has also developed a new piece of software that calculates how magnetic materials interact to produce collective motion (known as spin waves) which are measurable at central facilities using neutron scattering. We are collaborating to extend these features into the publicly available code VAMPIRE for use in the wider academic and research community. This is being supported by the ISIS Neutron and Muon source and also by experimentalists at Cambridge and Edinburgh.

We have also shown the criteria for switching of magnetisation using very short laser pulses with frequencies in the terahertz frequency range. Our results demonstrate that it is feasible for switching to occur via coupling of the electric field component of the light (via spin-orbit effects) to the magnetic system. Experimental results have confirmed that the coupling is possible, but switching is currently beyond the experimental limit in terms of the amplitude of field that can be generated.
Exploitation Route Historically, developments of models that are able to account for a range of stimuli have been well adopted by the academic community and also the data storage and spintronics industry. The future of magnetism research looks set to continue in the area of high frequency spintronics and antiferromagnets for a key part of that, so this is an important development.

Our "spin wave" code will be developed further and we believe it will be an important tool for academics working in computational and experimental magnetism. Furthermore, we believe it could be an important tool for researchers at central facilities who have direct access to neutron scattering facilities that will look to corroborate their findings.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software)

 
Description Novel Metrology for Magnetic Materials 
Organisation National Physical Laboratory
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Developed computational models to enable analysis of new metrological method.
Collaborator Contribution NPL have developed the metrological method.
Impact Local thermoelectric response from a single Néel domain wall, Science Advances, Vol 8, Issue 47, adc9798 (2022). https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/sciadv.adc9798
Start Year 2021
 
Description Postgraduate Summer School (Porto, Portugal) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Around 80 postgraduate students attended a school with a key focus on ultrafast magnetism (the topic of the grant). Networking activities and expert panel discussions were also included.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://magnetofon.science.ru.nl/TrainingSchools
 
Description Postgraduate Workshop (Abingdon, UK) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Around 30 postgraduates students attended a workshop on magnetism to support early stage PhD student broaden their understanding of the field. Open debate and questions followed.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://iop.eventsair.com/mws2022/
 
Description Presentation at EU Networking Activity (Samabor Croatia) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact EU COST Action networking meeting and committee meeting. Presentation of results of project. In addition around 25 postgraduate students were in attendance.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://magnetofon.science.ru.nl/TrainingSchools