Electric-field-controlled magnetism can boost energy efficiency in widespread applications. However, technologically, this effect is facing important challenges: mechanical failure in strain-mediated piezoelectric/magnetostrictive devices, dearth of room-temperature multiferroics, or stringent thickness limitations in electrically charged metallic films. Voltage-driven ionic motion (magneto-ionics) circumvents most of these drawbacks while exhibiting interesting magnetoelectric phenomena. Nevertheless, magneto-ionics typically requires heat treatments and multicomponent heterostructures. Here we report on the electrolytegated and defect-mediated O and Co transport in a Co 3 O 4 single layer which allows for room-temperature voltage-controlled ON−OFF ferromagnetism (magnetic switch) via internal reduction/oxidation processes. Negative voltages partially reduce Co 3 O 4 to Co (ferromagnetism: ON), resulting in graded films including Co-and O-rich areas. Positive bias oxidizes Co back to Co 3 O 4 (paramagnetism: OFF). This electric-field-induced atomic-scale reconfiguration process is compositionally, structurally, and magnetically reversible and self-sustained, since no oxygen source other than the Co 3 O 4 itself is required. This process could lead to electric-field-controlled device concepts for spintronics.
Manipulation of the magnetic behavior of materials with voltage (i.e., magnetoelectric actuation) has become a topic of intense research during the last years. Apart from its obvious interest from a basic science standpoint, control and eventual switching of the magnetization without applying any external magnetic field (or spin polarized current) has the potential to drastically reduce the power consumption of magnetic devices due to the lack (or minimization) of Joule heating dissipation effects. Herein, an overview of the state-of-the-art of electrolyte-gated magnetoelectric actuation (where an electric field is applied using an electrolyte, either liquid or solid) is provided. The different types of mechanisms responsible for voltage-driven magnetic actuation (surface charging, ionic migration, also termed “magneto-ionics,” reduction/oxidation reactions, and ferroelectric/ferromagnetic coupling) are summarized. The various effects (changes in coercivity, anisotropy easy axis, exchange bias field, saturation magnetization, Curie temperature, etc.) observed in the different types of materials investigated so far (mainly metallic thin films and semiconductors, porous alloys, and nanocomposite structures) are described. The potential applications of electrolyte-gated magnetoelectric actuation in devices as well as the current challenges in the field are also reviewed with the aim of providing the basic ingredients for further prospects and technological advancements in this area.
Magnetic data storage and magnetically actuated devices are conventionally controlled by magnetic fields generated using electric currents. This involves significant power dissipation by Joule heating effect. To optimize energy efficiency, manipulation of magnetic information with lower magnetic fields (i.e., lower electric currents) is desirable. This can be accomplished by reducing the coercivity of the actuated material. Here, a drastic reduction of coercivity is observed at room temperature in thick (≈600 nm), nanoporous, electrodeposited Cu-Ni films by simply subjecting them to the action of an electric field. The effect is due to voltage-induced changes in the magnetic anisotropy. The large surface-area-to-volume ratio and the ultranarrow pore walls of the system allow the whole film, and not only the topmost surface, to effectively contribute to the observed magnetoelectric effect. This waives the stringent "ultrathin-film requirement" from previous studies, where small voltage-driven coercivity variations were reported. This observation expands the already wide range of applications of nanoporous materials (hitherto in areas like energy storage or catalysis) and it opens new paradigms in the fields of spintronics, computation, and magnetic actuation in general.is conventionally done by localized magnetic fields (generated via electromagnetic induction) or by spin-polarized electric currents (spin-transfer torque). [2,4] Both principles require of relatively high electric currents and therefore involve significant loss of energy in the form of heat dissipation (Joule effect). For example, the currents needed to operate conventional magnetic random-access memories (MRAMs) are of the order of 10 mA, whereas spin-transfer torque MRAMs require currents of at least 0.5 mA. This is still a factor five times larger than the output currents delivered by highly miniaturized metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors. [5] Replacement of electric currents by electric fields would drastically contribute to reduce the overall power consumption in these and other devices.Several approaches to tailor magnetism by means of an electric field have been proposed so far: (i) strain-mediated magnetoelectric coupling in piezoelectric-magnetostrictive composite materials, [6,7] (ii) multiferroic materials in which the ferroelectric and ferromagnetic order parameters are coupled to each other, [8] and (iii) electric-field induced oxidation-reduction transitions (magnetoionics). [9,10] However, each of these approaches faces some drawbacks, e.g., (i) clamping effects with the substrate, need of epitaxial interfaces, and risk of fatigue-induced mechanical failure; (ii) the dearth of available multiferroic materials and the reduced strength of magnetoelectric coupling, even at low temperatures; and (iii) precise control of the chemical
Magneto-ionics, understood as voltage-driven ion transport in magnetic materials, has largely relied on controlled migration of oxygen ions. Here, we demonstrate room-temperature voltage-driven nitrogen transport (i.e., nitrogen magneto-ionics) by electrolyte-gating of a CoN film. Nitrogen magneto-ionics in CoN is compared to oxygen magneto-ionics in Co3O4. Both materials are nanocrystalline (face-centered cubic structure) and show reversible voltage-driven ON-OFF ferromagnetism. In contrast to oxygen, nitrogen transport occurs uniformly creating a plane-wave-like migration front, without assistance of diffusion channels. Remarkably, nitrogen magneto-ionics requires lower threshold voltages and exhibits enhanced rates and cyclability. This is due to the lower activation energy for ion diffusion and the lower electronegativity of nitrogen compared to oxygen. These results may open new avenues in applications such as brain-inspired computing or iontronics in general.
A synergetic approach to enhance magnetoelectric effects (i.e., control of magnetism with voltage) and improve energy efficiency in magnetically actuated devices is presented. The investigated material consists of an ordered array of Co−Pt microdisks, in which nanoporosity and partial oxidation are introduced during the synthetic procedure to synergetically boost the effects of electric field. The microdisks are grown by electrodeposition from an electrolyte containing an amphiphilic polymeric surfactant. The bath formulation is designed to favor the incorporation of oxygen in the form of cobalt oxide. A pronounced reduction of coercivity (88%) and a remarkable increase of Kerr signal amplitude (60%) are observed at room temperature upon subjecting the microdisks to negative voltages through an electrical double layer. These large voltage-induced changes in the magnetic properties of the microdisks are due to (i) the high surface-area-to-volume ratio with ultranarrow pore walls (sub-10 nm) that promote enhanced electric charge accumulation and (ii) magneto-ionic effects, where voltage-driven O 2− migration promotes a partial reduction of CoO to Co at room temperature. This simple and versatile procedure to fabricate patterned "nano-in-micro" magnetic motifs with adjustable voltage-driven magnetic properties is very appealing for energy-efficient magnetic recording systems and other magnetoelectronic devices.
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