NSF grant puts spin in semiconductor materials

Kharel and undergraduate researcher Zachary Lehmann measuring manetic properties of half-metallic alloy
Associate professor of physics Parashu Kharel, left, and undergraduate researcher Zachary Lehmann of Sioux Falls measure the magnetic properties of a half-metallic alloy. The research is supported by a three-year, nearly $160,000 National Science Foundation grant through the Division of Materials Research and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, known as EPSCoR.

Story written by: Christie Delfanian

The secret is in the spin.

New semiconductor materials that use an electron鈥檚 spin to store information can make computers and electronic devices faster, smaller, more energy efficient and less expensive, according to 葫芦影业 associate professor of physics Parashu Kharel. He has been formulating new spintronic materials known as half-metallic Heusler compounds for more than five years.

This fall, Kharel received a three-year, nearly $160,000 National Science Foundation grant through the Division of Materials Research and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, known as EPSCoR, to develop and test Heusler compounds for spintronic applications. Two undergraduate students will also work on the project.

Student preparing tube furnace
Senior physics/math major Abdullah Al Maruf prepares the tube furnace to anneal a half-metallic alloy in an oxygen-free chamber, which gives the material a better crystalline structure.

Spintronic materials use the direction of an electron鈥檚 spin, up or down, to store information, Kharel explained. 鈥淭he goal of the NSF project is to develop a half-metal that behaves as an insulator/semiconductor for one spin direction and a conductor for the opposite spin direction at room temperature.鈥 These attributes make the material 100% spin polarized.

鈥淯sing these materials for data manipulation and storage means greater energy efficiency because significantly less energy is needed for the write operation,鈥 he said. 鈥淒ata storage and retrieval is done electrically without any moving parts enabling the integration of magnetic memory components with semiconductor chips.鈥  

For the project, Kharel will collaborate with University of Northern Iowa physics researchers, associate professor Pavel Lukashev and professor Paul Shand, who received a separate NSF grant. Kharel has been working with the UNI group since 2014.

The NSF project is based on two discoveries that Kharel and the UNI group made about Heusler compounds. First, the researchers modified the elemental composition thereby transforming the compounds from a regular metal into a new material with 100% spin polarization, also known as a spin-gapless semiconducting material.

Furthermore, they found these materials retain their spin polarization when applied as a thin film. 鈥淭his was an unexpected discovery because the thin-film geometry commonly destroys the half-metal鈥檚 beneficial properties,鈥 Kharel said. This discovery may make components with multilayer designs possible.

鈥淯NI does the theoretical work and we make the material,鈥 Kharel said. Both teams then do experimental work to examine the material鈥檚 crystal structure, to evaluate its magnetic and electron transport properties and to measure the degree of spin polarization. 鈥淲orking together helps us make discoveries faster,鈥 Kharel concluded.

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