| Literature DB >> 30696897 |
J M Algarin1, B Ramaswamy2, I N Weinberg3, Y J Chen4, I N Krivorotov4, J A Katine5, B Shapiro2,6, E Waks7.
Abstract
Frequency conversion forms an integral block of the electronic circuits used in various applications including energy harvesting, communications and signal processing. These frequency conversion units however require external power sources and occupy a large device footprint making it difficult to be integrated in micro-circuits. Here we demonstrate that nanoscale magnetic tunnel junctions can act as frequency converters without an external power supply or DC bias source. The device directly mixes an external microwave signal with the internal spin precession oscillations to create new frequencies tunable by an external magnetic field in a single device with a small device footprint. We observe up-conversion and down-conversion of the input signal for excitation frequencies between 2 GHz and 6 GHz. We also show that the device acts as a zero-bias rectifier that can generate voltages exceeding 12 mV when the excitation frequency matches the natural oscillations mode of the device.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30696897 PMCID: PMC6351604 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-37415-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the nanopillar nanoscale magnetic tunnel junction device. The numbers in parenthesis are the layer thicknesses in units of nanometers. (b) A schematic of the microwave circuit used for power spectral density and direct voltage measurement from the device. (c) Picture of the setup showing the nanoscale magnetic tunnel junction chip and the solenoid. (d) Magnification of the nanoscale magnetic tunnel junction connected to the microprobe with the coil above. The microprobe and the connection pads along with the nanoscale magnetic tunnel junction forming an effective coupler.
Figure 2Power spectral density measured in dBm of the signal from the nanoscale magnetic tunnel junction for a direct current of 100 μA.
Summary of experiments performed in this work.
| Experiment | Magnetic Field | Input Frequency | Input Amplitude | Distance | Measurement | Figure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | X | 3.5 GHz | 23 dBm | 0.5 mm | PSD |
|
| II | 31 mT | X | 23 dBm | 0.5 mm | PSD |
|
| III | 31 mT | 3.5 GHz | X | 0.5 mm | PSD |
|
| IV | X | 3.5 GHz | 23 dBm | 0.5 mm | Rectified Voltage |
|
| V | 66 mT | 3.5 GHz | 23 dBm | X | Rectified Voltage |
|
“X” indicates the magnitude that we sweep in the given experiment. The magnitudes are the external magnetic field produced by the electromagnet, the input signal frequency, the input signal amplitude and the distance between the solenoid and the device. We also indicate the measured magnitude (power spectral density (PSD) or rectified voltage) and the corresponding figure.
Figure 3(a) Microwave output spectrum of the device measured in dBm as a function of applied magnetic field. (b) Frequency difference between the upper (red line) and lower (green line) branch and the excitation frequency, along with the natural frequency (black line) of the device (c) Power spectral output at 31 mT and 23 dBm for different excitation frequencies. (d) Peak power for the lower (black line) and upper (red line) branch for 31 mT and 3.5 GHz at different excitation amplitudes.
Figure 4(a) Rectified voltage at different external magnetic fields. (b) Rectified voltage for 66 mT and different distances between the solenoid antenna and the spintronic device.