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Room temp chirality switching and detection in a helimagnetic MnAu2 thin film (nature.com)
46 points by westurner 3 months ago | hide | past | favorite | 3 comments



"Room temperature chirality switching and detection in a helimagnetic MnAu2 thin film" (2024) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-46326-4 :

> Helimagnetic structures, in which the magnetic moments are spirally ordered, host an internal degree of freedom called chirality corresponding to the handedness of the helix. The chirality seems quite robust against disturbances and is therefore promising for next-generation magnetic memory. While the chirality control was recently achieved by the magnetic field sweep with the application of an electric current at low temperature in a conducting helimagnet, problems such as low working temperature and cumbersome control and detection methods have to be solved in practical applications. Here we show chirality switching by electric current pulses at room temperature in a thin-film MnAu2 helimagnetic conductor. Moreover, we have succeeded in detecting the chirality at zero magnetic fields by means of simple transverse resistance measurement utilizing the spin Berry phase in a bilayer device composed of MnAu2 and a spin Hall material Pt. These results may pave the way to helimagnet-based spintronics.


I wonder if there might be a way to exploit this effect to flux-pump a high temperature superconductor. Sort of like how the temperature/magnetic permeability curve of Prussian blue can be used to repeatedly ratchet up the trapped flux.


This is posited as a "next generation" magnetic memory, but lets imagine this effect (chirality control and sensing of tiny magnetic cells) ends up working perfectly, ie the sensor is cheap/trivial, and so is flipping the chirality.

Doesn't this still leave us with just slightly more dense hard drives? Aren't they still abysmally slow and have long seek times? That seems more like a minor progression rather than a generational improvement.




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