
Spin wave visualized by S. Watanabe and M. Hamdi
Thanks to a breakthrough in the field of magnonics, EPFL researchers have sent and stored data using charge-free magnetic waves, rather than traditional electron flows. The discovery could solve the dilemma of energy-hungry computing technology in the age of big data.
Like electronics or photonics, magnonics is an engineering subfield that aims to advance information technologies when it comes to speed, device architecture, and energy consumption. A magnon corresponds to the specific amount of energy required to change the magnetization of a material via a collective excitation called a spin wave (visualized above).
Because they interact with magnetic fields, magnons can be used to encode and transport data without electron flows, which involve energy loss through heating (known as Joule heating) of the conductor used. As Dirk Grundler, head of the Lab of Nanoscale Magnetic Materials and Magnonics (LMGN) in the School of Engineering explains, energy losses are an increasingly serious barrier to electronics as data speeds and storage demands soar.
“With the advent of AI, the use of computing technology has increased so much that energy consumption threatens its development,” Grundler says. “A major issue is traditional computing architecture, which separates processors and memory. The signal conversions involved in moving data between different components slow down computation and waste energy.”
This inefficiency, known as the memory wall or Von Neumann bottleneck, has had researchers searching for new computing architectures that can better support the demands of big data. And now, Grundler believes his lab might have stumbled on such a “holy grail”.
While doing other experiments on a commercial wafer of the ferrimagnetic insulator yttrium iron garnet (YIG) with nanomagnetic strips on its surface, LMGN PhD student Korbinian Baumgaertl was inspired to develop precisely engineered YIG-nanomagnet devices. With the Center of MicroNanoTechnology‘s support, Baumgaertl was able to excite spin waves in the YIG at specific gigahertz frequencies using radiofrequency signals, and – crucially – to reverse the magnetization of the surface nanomagnets.
“The two possible orientations of these nanomagnets represent magnetic states 0 and 1, which allows digital information to be encoded and stored,” Grundler explains.
A route to in-memory computation
The scientists made their discovery using a conventional vector network analyzer, which sent a spin wave through the YIG-nanomagnet device. Nanomagnet reversal happened only when the spin wave hit a certain amplitude, and could then be used to write and read data.
“We can now show that the same waves we use for data processing can be used to switch the magnetic nanostructures so that we also have nonvolatile magnetic storage within the very same system,” Grundler explains, adding that “nonvolatile” refers to the stable storage of data over long time periods without additional energy consumption.
It’s this ability to process and store data in the same place that gives the technique its potential to change the current computing architecture paradigm by putting an end to the energy-inefficient separation of processors and memory storage, and achieving what is known as in-memory computation.
Optimization on the horizon
Baumgaertl and Grundler have published the groundbreaking results in the journal Nature Communications, and the LMGN team is already working on optimizing their approach.
“Now that we have shown that spin waves write data by switching the nanomagnets from states 0 to 1, we need to work on a process to switch them back again – this is known as toggle switching,” Grundler says.
He also notes that theoretically, the magnonics approach could process data in the terahertz range of the electromagnetic spectrum (for comparison, current computers function in the slower gigahertz range). However, they still need to demonstrate this experimentally.
“The promise of this technology for more sustainable computing is huge. With this publication, we are hoping to reinforce interest in wave-based computation, and attract more young researchers to the growing field of magnonics.”
Original Article: Magnon-based computation could signal computing paradigm shift
More from: École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
The Latest Updates from Bing News
Go deeper with Bing News on:
Magnonics
- Laboratory Course: Nonlinear Physics
During the practical course, experiments on nonlinear effects in electrical, magnetic and optical systems can be carried out, depending on your interests. From the following offer, 2 experiments with ...
- Magnonic computing: Faster spin waves could make novel computing systems possible
A new way of transmitting information is emerging from the field of magnonics: instead of electron exchange, the waves generated in magnetic media could be used for transmission, but magnonics ...
- Outstanding referees
Dr Paul Keatley is the Senior Experimental Officer of the Exeter Time-Resolved Magnetism (EXTREMAG) facility in the UK with a research background in Spintronics and Magnonics and particular ...
- Maiti Research Group
We are interested in studying low-dimensional systems like the lattice of Graphene, Kagome etc. (which are strictly 2D); and Fe and Cu based superconductors (which are quasi-2D). These systems can ...
Go deeper with Bing News on:
In-memory computation
- Aspartame could cause memory and learning deficits in future generations: new study
The non-sugar, low-calorie sweetener aspartame has been linked to potential problems with memory and learning, according to a study from the Florida State University (FSU) College of Medicine. In ...
- Are depression and memory loss connected?
This can include impacting memory. A 2018 analysis of earlier studies into the effects of depression and memory found that people with at least one symptom of depression self-reported memory ...
- AMD Completes Epyc Arc With Siena Launch – In Less Than 12 Months!
What modifications on the Epyc architecture did AMD employ for these latest workloads but also, how did AMD essentially launch four product lines in less than 12 months?
- 2030, In-memory OLAP Database Market Size | Industry Report 2023
The "In-memory OLAP Database Market" is one of the sectors that is expanding the fastest, thus it is crucial for players in the market to first do an exhaustive analysis of the sector. The In ...
- 4DS Memory’s fab Fourth Platform results are WAY better than they imagined
Aussie semiconductor developer 4DS Memory has just revealed even better test results than the game changers dropped a few weeks ... Read More The post 4DS Memory’s fab Fourth Platform results are WAY ...