Picosecond Spin Orbit Torque Switching
Abstract
Reducing energy dissipation while increasing speed in computation and memory is a long-standing challenge for spintronics research. In the last 20 years, femtosecond lasers have emerged as a tool to control the magnetization in specific magnetic materials at the picosecond timescale. However, the use of ultrafast optics in integrated circuits and memories would require a major paradigm shift. An ultrafast electrical control of the magnetization is far preferable for integrated systems. Here we demonstrate reliable and deterministic control of the out-of-plane magnetization of a 1 nm-thick Co layer with single 6 ps-wide electrical pulses that induce spin-orbit torques on the magnetization. We can monitor the ultrafast magnetization dynamics due to the spin-orbit torques on sub-picosecond timescales, thus far accessible only by numerical simulations. Due to the short duration of our pulses, we enter a counter-intuitive regime of switching where heat dissipation assists the reversal. Moreover, we estimate a low energy cost to switch the magnetization, projecting to below 1fJ for a (20 nm)^3 cell. These experiments prove that spintronic phenomena can be exploited on picosecond time-scales for full magnetic control and should launch a new regime of ultrafast spin torque studies and applications.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1912.01377,
title = {Picosecond Spin Orbit Torque Switching},
author = {Kaushalya Jhuria and Julius Hohlfeld and Akshay Pattabi and Elodie Martin and Aldo Ygnacio Arriola Córdova and Xinping Shi and Roberto Lo Conte and Sebastien Petit-Watelot and Juan Carlos Rojas-Sanchez and Gregory Malinowski and Stéphane Mangin and Aristide Lemaître and Michel Hehn and Jeffrey Bokor and Richard B. Wilson and Jon Gorchon},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1912.01377},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
Includes article + supplementary information. Latest version uses full name of the first author. Nature Electronics (2020)