• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
HK Businesswire
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World

    Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims

    Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

    Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

    Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

    Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

    Lawmaker calls for loan limits for domestic workers

    Lawmaker calls for loan limits for domestic workers

    All tropical cyclone signals cancelled: HKO

    All tropical cyclone signals cancelled: HKO

    Mable Chan to visit Shanghai

    Mable Chan to visit Shanghai

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Xiaomi SU7 Ultra Becomes Fastest Mass-Produced EV on Nürburgring Nordschleife

    MPF at 25: PwC and HKRSA Urge Bold Reform for Hong Kong’s Retirement System

    CrowdStrike Shares Dip Despite Strong Q1 Earnings Amid Soft Revenue Guidance

    Constellation Energy (CEG) Stock Surges 37% in May 2025 Amid Strong Earnings and Strategic Partnerships

    Dunamu and HYBE’s NFT Platform ‘Momentica’ to Cease Operations Amid Ongoing Losses

    Shein Shifts IPO Plans to Hong Kong After London Listing Stalls

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World

    Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims

    Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

    Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

    Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

    Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

    Lawmaker calls for loan limits for domestic workers

    Lawmaker calls for loan limits for domestic workers

    All tropical cyclone signals cancelled: HKO

    All tropical cyclone signals cancelled: HKO

    Mable Chan to visit Shanghai

    Mable Chan to visit Shanghai

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Xiaomi SU7 Ultra Becomes Fastest Mass-Produced EV on Nürburgring Nordschleife

    MPF at 25: PwC and HKRSA Urge Bold Reform for Hong Kong’s Retirement System

    CrowdStrike Shares Dip Despite Strong Q1 Earnings Amid Soft Revenue Guidance

    Constellation Energy (CEG) Stock Surges 37% in May 2025 Amid Strong Earnings and Strategic Partnerships

    Dunamu and HYBE’s NFT Platform ‘Momentica’ to Cease Operations Amid Ongoing Losses

    Shein Shifts IPO Plans to Hong Kong After London Listing Stalls

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
HK Businesswire
No Result
View All Result
Home News Science

Physicists observe a new form of magnetism for the first time

David Lee by David Lee
5 June 2025
in Science
0
Physicists observe a new form of magnetism for the first time
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

MIT physicists have demonstrated a new form of magnetism that could one day be harnessed to build faster, denser, and less power-hungry “spintronic” memory chips.The new magnetic state is a mash-up of two main forms of magnetism: the ferromagnetism of everyday fridge magnets and compass needles, and antiferromagnetism, in which materials have magnetic properties at the microscale yet are not macroscopically magnetized.Now, the MIT team has demonstrated a new form of magnetism, termed “p-wave magnetism.”Physicists have long observed that electrons of atoms in regular ferromagnets share the same orientation of “spin,” like so many tiny compasses pointing in the same direction. This spin alignment generates a magnetic field, which gives a ferromagnet its inherent magnetism. Electrons belonging to magnetic atoms in an antiferromagnet also have spin, although these spins alternate, with electrons orbiting neighboring atoms aligning their spins antiparallel to each other. Taken together, the equal and opposite spins cancel out, and the antiferromagnet does not exhibit macroscopic magnetization.The team discovered the new p-wave magnetism in nickel iodide (NiI2), a two-dimensional crystalline material that they synthesized in the lab. Like a ferromagnet, the electrons exhibit a preferred spin orientation, and, like an antiferromagnet, equal populations of opposite spins result in a net cancellation. However, the spins on the nickel atoms exhibit a unique pattern, forming spiral-like configurations within the material that are mirror-images of each other, much like the left hand is the right hand’s mirror image.What’s more, the researchers found this spiral spin configuration enabled them to carry out “spin switching”: Depending on the direction of spiraling spins in the material, they could apply a small electric field in a related direction to easily flip a left-handed spiral of spins into a right-handed spiral of spins, and vice-versa.The ability to switch electron spins is at the heart of “spintronics,” which is a proposed alternative to conventional electronics. With this approach, data can be written in the form of an electron’s spin, rather than its electronic charge, potentially allowing orders of magnitude more data to be packed onto a device while using far less power to write and read that data.   “We showed that this new form of magnetism can be manipulated electrically,” says Qian Song, a research scientist in MIT’s Materials Research Laboratory. “This breakthrough paves the way for a new class of ultrafast, compact, energy-efficient, and nonvolatile magnetic memory devices.”Song and his colleagues published their results May 28 in the journal Nature. MIT co-authors include Connor Occhialini, Batyr Ilyas, Emre Ergeçen, Nuh Gedik, and Riccardo Comin, along with Rafael Fernandes at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and collaborators from multiple other institutions.Connecting the dotsThe discovery expands on work by Comin’s group in 2022. At that time, the team probed the magnetic properties of the same material, nickel iodide. At the microscopic level, nickel iodide resembles a triangular lattice of nickel and iodine atoms. Nickel is the material’s main magnetic ingredient, as the electrons on the nickel atoms exhibit spin, while those on iodine atoms do not.In those experiments, the team observed that the spins of those nickel atoms were arranged in a spiral pattern throughout the material’s lattice, and that this pattern could spiral in two different orientations.At the time, Comin had no idea that this unique pattern of atomic spins could enable precise switching of spins in surrounding electrons. This possibility was later raised by collaborator Rafael Fernandes, who along with other theorists was intrigued by a recently proposed idea for a new, unconventional, “p-wave” magnet, in which electrons moving along opposite directions in the material would have their spins aligned in opposite directions.Fernandes and his colleagues recognized that if the spins of atoms in a material form the geometric spiral arrangement that Comin observed in nickel iodide, that would be a realization of a “p-wave” magnet. Then, when an electric field is applied to switch the “handedness” of the spiral, it should also switch the spin alignment of the electrons traveling along the same direction.In other words, such a p-wave magnet could enable simple and controllable switching of electron spins, in a way that could be harnessed for spintronic applications.“It was a completely new idea at the time, and we decided to test it experimentally because we realized nickel iodide was a good candidate to show this kind of p-wave magnet effect,” Comin says.Spin currentFor their new study, the team synthesized single-crystal flakes of nickel iodide by first depositing powders of the respective elements on a crystalline substrate, which they placed in a high-temperature furnace. The process causes the elements to settle into layers, each arranged microscopically in a triangular lattice of nickel and iodine atoms.“What comes out of the oven are samples that are several millimeters wide and thin, like cracker bread,” Comin says. “We then exfoliate the material, peeling off even smaller flakes, each several microns wide, and a few tens of nanometers thin.”The researchers wanted to know if, indeed, the spiral geometry of the nickel atoms’s spins would force electrons traveling in opposite directions to have opposite spins, like what Fernandes expected a p-wave magnet should exhibit. To observe this, the group applied to each flake a beam of circularly polarized light — light that produces an electric field that rotates in a particular direction, for instance, either clockwise or counterclockwise.They reasoned that if travelling electrons interacting with the spin spirals have a spin that is aligned in the same direction, then incoming light, polarized in that same direction, should resonate and produce a characteristic signal. Such a signal would confirm that the traveling electrons’ spins align because of the spiral configuration, and furthermore, that the material does in fact exhibit p-wave magnetism.And indeed, that’s what the group found. In experiments with multiple nickel iodide flakes, the researchers directly observed that the direction of the electron’s spin was correlated to the handedness of the light used to excite those electrons. Such is a telltale signature of p-wave magnetism, here observed for the first time.Going a step further, they looked to see whether they could switch the spins of the electrons by applying an electric field, or a small amount of voltage, along different directions through the material. They found that when the direction of the electric field was in line with the direction of the spin spiral, the effect switched electrons along the route to spin in the same direction, producing a current of like-spinning electrons.“With such a current of spin, you can do interesting things at the device level, for instance, you could flip magnetic domains that can be used for control of a magnetic bit,” Comin explains. “These spintronic effects are more efficient than conventional electronics because you’re just moving spins around, rather than moving charges. That means you’re not subject to any dissipation effects that generate heat, which is essentially the reason computers heat up.”“We just need a small electric field to control this magnetic switching,” Song adds. “P-wave magnets could save five orders of magnitude of energy. Which is huge.”“We are excited to see these cutting-edge experiments confirm our prediction of p-wave spin polarized states,” says Libor Šmejkal, head of the Max Planck Research Group in Dresden, Germany, who is one of the authors of the theoretical work that proposed the concept of p-wave magnetism but was not involved in the new paper. “The demonstration of electrically switchable p-wave spin polarization also highlights the promising applications of unconventional magnetic states.”The team observed p-wave magnetism in nickel iodide flakes, only at ultracold temperatures of about 60 kelvins.“That’s below liquid nitrogen, which is not necessarily practical for applications,” Comin says. “But now that we’ve realized this new state of magnetism, the next frontier is finding a material with these properties, at room temperature. Then we can apply this to a spintronic device.”This research was supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Tags: Science
David Lee

David Lee

Read More

First-of-its-kind device profiles newborns’ immune function

First-of-its-kind device profiles newborns’ immune function

13 June 2025

Is Gravity Just Entropy Rising? Long-Shot Idea Gets Another Look.

13 June 2025
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Over 150 firms hoping to list in Hong Kong: HKEX

Over 150 firms hoping to list in Hong Kong: HKEX

28 May 2025
Stablecoins laws effective Aug 1

Stablecoins laws effective Aug 1

6 June 2025

Macau Enforces 183-Day Residency Rule for 2025 Wealth Partaking Scheme

29 May 2025

Power Talk | Cody OOH’s Hilda Cheung: Reinventing Hong Kong’s Moving Billboards for the AI Age

2 June 2025
Tottenham sign Tel on permanent deal from Bayern

Tottenham sign Tel on permanent deal from Bayern

15 June 2025

Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims

15 June 2025
Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

15 June 2025
Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

15 June 2025

Recent News

Tottenham sign Tel on permanent deal from Bayern

Tottenham sign Tel on permanent deal from Bayern

15 June 2025

Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims

15 June 2025
Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

Israel keeps up Iran strikes after missile barrage

15 June 2025
Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

Manslaughter suspect arrested after gang fight

15 June 2025
HK Businesswire

Stay ahead with the latest insights on Hong Kong’s economy, finance, and investments. From market trends to policy updates, we bring you in-depth analysis and expert opinions.

📩 Subscribe to our newsletter for exclusive updates.
📍 Follow us on social media for real-time news.
📧 Contact us: info@hongkong-invest.com

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com