Voltage Control of Uni-directional Anisotropy in Ferromagnet-Multiferroic System
Sasikanth Manipatruni, Dmitri E. Nikonov, Chia-Ching Lin, Prasad, Bhagwati, Yen Lin Huang, Anoop R. Damodaran, Zuhuang Chen, Ramamoorthy, Ramesh, Ian A. Young

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates electrical control of exchange bias in a BiFeO3-based spin valve at room temperature, enabling ultra-low energy, non-volatile magnetic switching for future computing technologies.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of electrically controlled, reversible exchange bias in a scaled BiFeO3 spin valve, advancing magneto-electric device applications.
Findings
Electrical control of exchange bias demonstrated at room temperature.
Exchange bias is thermally robust and reversible.
Potential for ultra-low energy, non-volatile computing elements.
Abstract
Demonstration of ultra-low energy switching mechanisms is an imperative for continued improvements in computing devices. Ferroelectric (FE) and multiferroic (MF) orders and their manipulation promises an ideal combination of state variables to reach atto-Joule range for logic and memory (i.e., ~ 30X lower switching energy than nanoelectronics). In BiFeO3 the coupling between the antiferromagnetic (AFM) and FE orders is robust at room temperature, scalable in voltage, stabilized by the FE order, and can be integrated into a fabrication process for a beyond-CMOS era. The presence of the AFM order and a canted magnetic moment in this system causes exchange interaction with a ferromagnet such as CoFe or LSMO. While previous work has shown that exchange coupling (uniaxial anisotropy) can be controlled with an electric field, several puzzling issues remain. Perhaps the most intriguing among…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
