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Electrically flipped magnets point to better memory

September 26th, 2008 · No Comments




Physicists in Japan have come up with a new way to manipulate magnetisation, which could produce less energy-hungry memory for future computers. Inside magnetic materials, tiny regions known as domains behave like individual magnets, and can have their north-south orientation flipped by a magnetic field.

Today’s computer hard discs work by using electromagnets to flip clumps of domains back and forth between the two possible orientations to encode digital 1s and 0s. The most advanced forms of temporary memory – RAM – use a similar approach.

But Japanese researchers have proved it is possible to manipulate magnetic domains in a semiconductor without using magnets. They simply use an electric field, generated by applying voltage to a nearby electrode, to shift magnetic domains.

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Tags: Memory · Research

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