Title :
Annular Spin-Transfer Memory Element
Author :
Kent, A.D. ; Stein, D.L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., New York Univ., New York, NY, USA
Abstract :
An annular magnetic memory that uses a spin-polarized current to switch the magnetization direction or helicity of a magnetic region is proposed. The device has magnetic materials in the shape of a ring (1-5 nm in thickness, 20-250 nm in mean radius, and 8-100 nm in width), comprising a reference magnetic layer with a fixed magnetic helicity and a free magnetic layer with a changeable magnetic helicity. These are separated by a thin nonmagnetic layer. Information is written using a current flowing perpendicular to the layers, inducing a spin-transfer torque that alters the magnetic state of the free layer. The resistance, which depends on the magnetic state of the device, is used to read out the stored information. This device offers several important advantages compared with conventional spin-transfer magnetic random access memory devices. First, the ring geometry offers stable magnetization states, which are, nonetheless, easily altered with short current pulses. Second, the ring geometry naturally solves a major challenge of spin-transfer devices: writing requires relatively high currents and a low impedance circuit, whereas readout demands a larger impedance and magnetoresistance. The annular device accommodates these conflicting requirements by performing reading and writing operations at separate read and write contacts placed at different locations on the ring.
Keywords :
helicity (elementary particles); magnetic materials; magnetic multilayers; magnetic storage; magnetoresistance; random-access storage; spin; annular device; annular magnetic memory; annular spin transfer memory element; fixed magnetic helicity; free magnetic layer; magnetic materials; magnetic random access memory; magnetic region helicity; magnetization direction; magnetoresistance; reference magnetic layer; size 1 nm to 5 nm; size 8 nm to 250 nm; spin polarized current; spin transfer device; Magnetic data storage; magnetic random access memory (MRAM); spin-transfer;
Journal_Title :
Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNANO.2009.2033598