Spin-torque switching with the giant spin hall effect of tantalum

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Abstract

Spin currents can apply useful torques in spintronic devices. The spin Hall effect has been proposed as a source of spin current, but its modest strength has limited its usefulness. We report a giant spin Hall effect (SHE) in β-tantalum that generates spin currents intense enough to induce efficient spin-torque switching of ferromagnets at room temperature. We quantify this SHE by three independent methods and demonstrate spin-torque switching of both out-of-plane and in-plane magnetized layers. We furthermore implement a three-terminal device that uses current passing through a tantalum-ferromagnet bilayer to switch a nanomagnet, with a magnetic tunnel junction for read-out. This simple, reliable, and efficient design may eliminate the main obstacles to the development of magnetic memory and nonvolatile spin logic technologies.

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Liu, L., Pai, C. F., Li, Y., Tseng, H. W., Ralph, D. C., & Buhrman, R. A. (2012). Spin-torque switching with the giant spin hall effect of tantalum. Science, 336(6081), 555–558. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1218197

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