Electrical control of magnetism by electric field and current-induced torques
Albert Fert, Ramamoorthy Ramesh, Vincent Garcia, F\`elix Casanova and, Manuel Bibes

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in electrically controlling magnetism through electric fields and current-induced torques, highlighting fundamental concepts, device innovations, and future research directions in spintronics and materials science.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the latest developments in electrical control of magnetism, integrating fundamental physics with device applications and future perspectives.
Findings
Major breakthroughs in spintronics and magnetoelectric coupling
Development of SOT-MRAMs and MESO transistors
Emerging device concepts for information technology
Abstract
While early magnetic memory designs relied on magnetization switching by locally generated magnetic fields, key insights in condensed matter physics later suggested the possibility to do it electrically. In the 1990s, Slonczewzki and Berger formulated the concept of current-induced spin torques in magnetic multilayers through which a spin-polarized current may switch the magnetization of a ferromagnet. This discovery drove the development of spin-transfer-torque magnetic random-access memories (STT-MRAMs). More recent research unveiled spin-orbit-torques (SOTs) and will lead to a new generation of devices including SOT-MRAMs. Parallel to these advances, multiferroics and their magnetoelectric coupling experienced a renaissance, leading to novel device concepts for information and communication technology such as the MESO transistor. The story of the electrical control of magnetization…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials · Magnetic properties of thin films · Multiferroics and related materials
