Researchers Reveal-Unusual Magnetic Behavior Could Improve Computer Memory
According to a study, a surprising, theory-defying effect observed in magnetic devices could lead to efficient, low-power forms of computer memory.
Although magnetic materials are already being used in today’s hard disk drives for long-term storage, semiconductors are currently used for short-term memory and processing, which is where most of the energy is consumed. However, as semiconductors shrink to meet consumer expectations for speed and density, there comes a limit to how small they can be made without risking the loss of information.

According to a study, a surprising, theory-defying effect observed in magnetic devices could lead to efficient, low-power forms of computer memory. For decades, applied physicists and semiconductor companies have developed computer memory that uses the direction of a magnetic field to store data. A magnetic pulse or a jolt of electricity can change the properties of an island of magnetic material, flipping its field up or down to represent a 1 or a 0. The primary advantage of this so-called magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM) is its durability.
“Once the data are recorded, you can pull the plug, and nothing will be lost,” says Chia-Ling Chien , Johns Hopkins University physicist.
Early versions of MRAM used magnetic fields to flip the bits, so each bit had to be far from its neighbors to prevent the applied field from modifying those nearby bits. As a result, this low-density yet highly durable memory found only niche applications. A new generation of MRAM uses electrical current to write data and offers greater storage density. Many companies now intend to use it to make computer chips that save energy by bringing memory and logic circuits closer together.
Researchers want to improve MRAM by developing memory that can be written using smaller pulses of current. This would reduce power requirements and improve the lifetime of the memory arrays.
To develop this new form of MRAM, the researchers are exploring a different bit-switching mechanism that takes advantage of an effect called spin-orbit torque. A group of researchers under Chien was working with an experimental device made up of nanometer-thin layers of a cobalt-iron-boron ferromagnet, a metal oxide, and tungsten held between a pair of gold electrodes. The researchers could flip the polarization of the CoFeB magnet by applying current through the electrodes, but only in the presence of a magnetic field. The tungsten layer acts as a kind of electron filter, allowing in only electrons with a particular spin. The momentum of that spin gets transferred to the magnet and flips the field.
While studying this device, something unusual was founded. They [researchers] wanted to see what happened when they broke one of the memory devices. They added a layer of platinum under the tungsten, expecting it would cancel out the spin-switching effect.
It resulted that the device hadn’t stopped working. Instead, the team found they could switch the platinum-frosted device simply by applying an electrical current—no magnetic field required. This simplification means such devices should be less complicated to build and operate. A group of researchers collaborated to image and verifies the switching effects, but the researchers still don’t understand why it works. It is suspected that existing theoretical models of spin-orbit torque need updating to explain this phenomenon.
“The findings have surprised other applied physicists and MRAM researchers. The combination of platinum and tungsten should lead to detrimental results”, says Shunsuke Fukami, a nanoelectronics researcher at Tohoku University. “I have no idea how to interpret this result, and I hope some theoretical studies will be performed in the future to explain it,” he says.
Jonathan Sun, an applied physicist developing MRAM technology at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center, says “it’s not uncommon for researchers studying novel magnetic switching mechanisms to uncover weird effects. “It’s the nature of the field at the moment—there’s a lot of complexity in these atomic layer arrangements,” he says.
With a better understanding of the underlying physics, researchers could someday build more efficient MRAM technologies.