Download Giant spin Seebeck effect in a non-magneticmaterial

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Neutron magnetic moment wikipedia , lookup

Shape-memory alloy wikipedia , lookup

Nanochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Heat transfer physics wikipedia , lookup

Ferrofluid wikipedia , lookup

Aharonov–Bohm effect wikipedia , lookup

Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers wikipedia , lookup

History of metamaterials wikipedia , lookup

Superconductivity wikipedia , lookup

Hall effect wikipedia , lookup

Magnetic skyrmion wikipedia , lookup

Giant magnetoresistance wikipedia , lookup

Condensed matter physics wikipedia , lookup

Semiconductor wikipedia , lookup

Geometrical frustration wikipedia , lookup

Multiferroics wikipedia , lookup

Ferromagnetism wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Center for Emergent Materials
The Ohio State University
http://cem.osu.edu
Giant spin-Seebeck effect could provide power from waste heat
spin/phonon effect increased 1000-fold in semiconductor with strong spin-orbit interactions
An OSU research team has been studying the
interaction between heat and magnetic materials. One
such effect, called the spin-Seebeck effect, allows for
heat to move magnetic information. The magnetic
information is then converted into electrical power. The
OSU team previously observed the effect to occur in a
magnetic semiconductor but it produced small
electrical power. The effect can be maximized when
heat particles, called phonons, drag the magnetic
moments. This past year, the OSU team discovered that
the effect is 1000 times larger in a material that
contains no magnetism. This strange result is explained
since the electrical charges in the material can also
have magnetism due to a property called spin. The
effect is strong enough that the OSU team is now Co
examining if it might be useful for converting heat into
electrical power based on this spin effect. Their
research is now focused on determining what
properties allow heat/magnetism/spin effects to
become largest and then producing materials that
display those effects.
(left) When heat causes atoms to vibrate in a crystal,
those vibrations can rotate the magnetism of
electrical charges, called spin. (right) The spin is
then converted into electrical power using a metal
strip.
Au
Co
Roberto Myers (Materials Science Engineering),
Chris Jaworski, Joseph Heremans (Mechanical
Engineering), and Ezekiel Johnston-Halperin
(Physics)
An NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC)
Supported under Award Number DMR-0820414