Researchers from Delft University of Technology have developed a sensor with dimensions invisible to the naked eye: it is made up of only 11 atoms in size.
The 11-atom sensor is capable of capturing magnetic waves and consists of an antenna, a reset button and a memory unit. The paper was published in the journal Communications Physics, “Remote sensing and recording of atomic-scale spin dynamics.”
The researchers hope to use their atomic sensor to learn more about the behavior of magnetic waves, to use them one day in sustainable technological applications.
More efficient processing with spintronics
Instead of using electrical signals, spintronics uses magnetic signals to transmit data: processing becomes much more efficient this way. The limiting problem is that magnetism is not so easily controlled, especially on a small scale. The waves propagate very quickly and disappear within nanoseconds.
A tamer of magnetic waves
It is in order to study these rapid oscillations that researchers from Delft University of Technology developed this tiny device.
In the space of just 11 atoms, the device has everything needed to detect, read and record data. The central idea of the invention is that the device instantly detects a magnetic wave and records this information.
Sander Ott, at the head of the research, compare the sensor to a mousetrap. “A mouse is too small and fast to be caught by hand. But a mousetrap reacts faster, and succeeds.”
Research on the “atomic” sensor
The researchers connected the device to a magnetic wire made of atoms, and sent magnetic waves through the "wire". Although the test wires were very short, the results are promising: the waves moved in a very peculiar way, as one would expect from quantum mechanics.
The next step is to apply this technique also to more complicated sensors and circuits to obtain more information on the behavior of spintronics.