Friday, 31 May 2013

Spin Valve Transistor Seminar Report

                                                CHAPTER-1
                                            INTRODUCTION
1.1     GENERAL INTRODUCTION
 Spintronics is a rapidly emerging field of science and technology that will most likely have a significant impact on the future of all aspects of electronics as we continue to move into the 21st century. Conventional electronics are based on the charge of the electron. Attempts to use the other fundamental property of an electron, its spin, have given rise to a new, rapidly evolving field, known as spintronics, an acronym for spin transport electronics that was first introduced in 1996 to designate a program of the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Initially, the spintronics program involved overseeing the development of advanced magnetic memory and sensors based on spin transport electronics Studies of spin-polarized transport in bulk and low-dimensional semiconductor structures show promise for the creation of a hybrid device that would combine magnetic storage with gain—in effect, a spin memory transistor.
 Magnetic materials and magnetic devices have occupied a major place in science and technology for most of the twentieth century and played a very important role in the emergence of the digital computer by providing both ferrite core and plated wire memories. It was not until the early 1980s that thin-film magnetism was applied to higher-density nonvolatile random access memory .A new path leading to the integration of magnetic devices into computer technology began to emerge with the discovery of giant magnetoresistance (GMR at low temperatures and high magnetic fields. Although it was known for quite some time that the current from a magnetic metal is spin-polarized and that current transport through adjacent magnetic layers depends on the spin-polarization of those layers, neither the magnitude of the current nor the temperature at which it was observed were of technological significance. Discoveries in this new field were quite rapid, and the path toward a new technology started to appear quite early. The first significant GMR device was the spin valve








CHAPTER-2
                        THEME: SPIN VALVE TRANSISTOR
2.1     Giant Magnetoresistance
Magnetic field sensors have found many applications: read heads in audio/video/computer systems,magnetic random access memories (MRAMs), position/ rotation/ velocity sensors in cars/ aircrafts/satellites, electronic compass applications, measurement of currents and scientific measurement instruments. Other applications for magnetoresistive sensors include coin evaluation, non-contact switching, and measurement of currents. An important issue in digital magnetic recording is the bit density and several new technologies have pushed this density forward. Future high density recording systems will depend increasingly on more sensitive field sensors, because of the shrinking bit sizes and magnetic fluxes. The thin film head, the thin film media and subsequently the introduction of magnetoresistance heads enhanced the annual bit density increase drastically.Due to tailoring of the magnetic materials in the base, the spin valve transistor shows a broad measurable field range and may further enhance bit densities.
 A major advantage of using magnetoresistive sensing of magnetic fields as compared to inductive sensing is the static measurement mode of the MR sensor: a static magnetic field can be detected in contrast to inductive pick-up coils for which a voltage is only generated by a temporal flux change. For magnetic recording, the increase of density leads to a corresponding reduction in magnetic signal. Inductive head designs have compensated for the weakening signal by increasing the number of turns in the coil, but each turn adds approximately 0.5 ohm of resistance to the circuit, with a corresponding increase in thermal noise. Beyond 1 Gbit/in2, this thermal noise of the coil becomes the main limitation preventing signal detection
   This new magnetoresistance called "Giant Magnetoresistance", was discovered in 1988 in magnetic multilayers. It was soon called the spin valve effect because the magnetic layers act as valves for electrons with different spin moments (spin up and spin down). The spin-valve transistor consists of three regions: a spin-valve base, a hot electron injector such as a Schottky barrier or a tunneling barrier and a collector barrier which discriminates between scattered and ballistic (not scattered) electrons. The base can be made of any magnetoresistive metal system.

2.2     The spin valve effect
  GMR effect can be observed in the conduction process in  magnetic materials, particularly the transition metals Fe, Co and Ni.Conduction electrons are  divided in to two classes , those whose spin is parallel to the local magnetization and those whose spin is anti parallel .The resistance to the flow of an electronic current in a metal is determined by the scattering processes to which the electrons are subject. If the scattering processes are strong and effective, the mean free path (mfp) of an electron between scattering processes is small and the resistance is large.Conversely, weak scattering processes lead to a long mfp and a low resistance.


Fig 2.1: Graph of conduction in multilayer magnetic film array, showing how differential spin scattering produces a different resistance for antiparallel (a) and parallel (b) film magnetizations.

 Consider now electronic conduction in a multilayer array such as shown in Fig. 2.1 In Fig. 2.1a the magnetic moments of successive ferromagnetic layers (Co) are antiparallel due to antiferromagnetic coupling across the spacer layer (Cu). In (b) they are parallel due to an external magnetic field which is strong enough to overcome the antiferromagnetic coupling. In case of  Fig.2.1a , antiparallel moments, no electron can traverse two magnetic layers without becoming unfavored , highly scattered species. An electron conserves its spin orientation as it traverses a solid .Therefore if it was the favored 'up' electron in an 'up' magnetization layer it becomes the unfavored 'down' electron in an 'up' magnetization layer as soon as it traverses the few Ångstroms of the spacer layer. In the case depicted in Fig.2.1a , by contrast, an electron having the favored 'up' spin orientation in one magnetic layer has the same favored orientation in all layers, and can traverse the array relatively freely. For configuration (a) no electron traverses the array freely; for (b) half of the electron species can traverse the array relatively freely, and a significant difference in resistance is measured between the parallel and anti-parallel arrays.

2.3     Spin valve transistor
2.3.1  Spin valve transistor principle
The perpendicular electron transport and exponential mean free path dependence in metal base transistors allows for fundamental detection of the perpendicular spin valve effect by incorporating a spin valve into the base. The base is formed by a spin valve. A Co44Å/Cu88Å/Co8Å/Pt88Å sandwich base is sputtered onto a Si(100) collector substrate. The emitter is negatively biased (forward) using a DC current source, the collector substrate is in reverse (positive voltage bias), in common base.
                                                        


Fig 2.2 Schematic cross section of the spin-valve transistor. A Co44Å/Cu88Å/Co8Å/Pt88Å sandwichbase is rf-sputtered onto the Si(100) collector substrate.

A Pt capping layer on top of the spin valve is used to make the emitter Schottky barrier larger than the collector barrier, in order to decrease quantum mechanical reflections at the collector barrier. This can also be seen in the schematic energy band diagram of the bonded Co/Cu spin-valve transistor in Fig. 2.2

        Fig. 2.3 Schematic energy band diagram of the spin-valve transistor under forward bias.

 2.4  Current Transfer
The emitter bias accelerates the electrons over the emitter barrier, after which they constitute the hot, quasi-ballistic electrons in the base. The probability of passing the collector barrier is limited by collisions in the base, which affect their energy and trajectory (momentum), by optical phonon scattering in the semiconductors and by quantum mechanical reflections at the base-collector interface. For a metal base transistor with a single metal base film the relationship between the collector current density Jc and the injected emitter current density Jinj is
 ………… (2.1)

where W is the base width (=thickness) and l the mean free path of the injected hot electrons in the base. ae represents the emitter efficiency, aqm represents quantum mechanical transmission and ac represents the collector efficiency. Jleakage is the collector leakage current, determined by the reverse biased collector Schottky barrier and Je is the injected emitter current. The avalanche multiplication factor M depends on device design but if impact ionization is absent, equals one. The leakage current of the collector may also contribute to the total collector current.
The emitter to collector current transfer ratio, or current gain is defined as:             

……….(2.2)
where the collector leakage current has been neglected. Here a0 is the common base current gain and a* is the common base current gain extrapolated to zero base thickness. The factor  represents the probability of transmission of the hot electrons through the base. Jc is the total collector current. In the spin-valve transistor under consideration, the collector current of the Co/Cu spinvalve  transistor depends exponentially on the spin dependent hot electron mean free paths in the base. Neglecting spin-flip scattering, we may consider the spin up and spin down electrons to carry the current in parallel (two current model). Following this idea, the collector current of the Co/Cu spin-valve transistor is
expressed as:             
                                                                                                       ……………(2.3)

               Õ +(-) denotes the product of transmission probabilities of spin up (+) and down (-)
electrons through each layer and interface. In first approximation we take ae, ac and aqm similar for the two species of electrons since these quantities reflect the properties of the semiconductors and Schottky barriers. At saturation, all Co layers have their magnetization parallel.
The sum of the transmission probability factors for the two spin channels can then be written as:
 

                                                                                                ……………… (2.4)
                                                               
                                                                                                  ………………(2.5)

where WCo expresses the sum of all Co layer widths (total Co thickness) which is valid for equally thick layers, ½W is half of the total Co thickness, WCu is the total Cu thickness , l the majority (minority) MFPs in the Co layers and l Cu the MFP in the Cu layer. The factor 2 in eqn appears because the two parallel channels are equal for magnetizations antiparallel. The values of the collector current in the parallel (P) and antiparallel (AP) magnetic configurations are then obtained .

The typical properties in the spin valve transistor are thus:
  1. Perpendicular GMR can be measured down to tri-layers
  2. Exponential amplification of the magnetoresistance occurs because the transfer is                                     exponentially dependent on the electron mean free path in the base
  3. Electron energy can be varied so electron spectroscopy can be performed by changing  emitter Schottky barrier height (or tunnel bias)     
  4. Measurements can be done at cryogenic and room temperature
  5.  Since the scattering processes appear as products in the transfer equation., the spin     dependent scattering centers can be located accurately and, in contrast to common -   CPP MR, the relative change in collector current CC(%) is not decreased by spin    independent scattering processes such as in the Cu layers or in the semiconductors
  6. As a consequence of the direct MFP dependence of the transmission across the base, the spinvalve transistor allows quantification of spin dependent electron MFPs l
7.   The output is a high impedance current source.

2.5      Resistance measurement
Resistance of the multilayer can be measured  with Current In Plane (CIP) or Current Perpendicular to the Plane (CPP) configurations. CIP is the easiest experimental approach of electrical transport in magnetic multilayers. But the drawback of  CIP configuration is that the spin valve effect is diminished by shunting  because many electron travel  within one layer because of channeling. Uncoupled multilayers or sandwitches  with thick spacer layer suffer from this problem .Spin independent boundary scattering reduces the CIP magnetoresistance largely in thin sandwiches. Also, fundamental parameters of the effect, such as the relative contributions of interface and bulk spin dependent scatterings are difficult to obtain using the CIP geometry. Measuring with the Current Perpendicular to the Planes (CPP) solve most of
                                                      
these problems, mainly because the electrons cross all magnetic layers, but a practical difficulty is encountered: the perpendicular resistance of the ultra thin multilayers is too small to be measured by ordinary techniques
.

.
Fig. 2.4 a. CIP-GMR: shunting and channeling of electrons in the magnetic and nonmagnetic layers versus b. CPP-GMR: perpendicular electrons cross all magnetic layers, no shunting at antiparallel alignment.
As shown in Fig. 2.4, a high resistant state (in zero field) can only be obtained if electrons cross at least two magnetic layers with antiparallel orientation. Because many electrons travel almost parallel to the layers in the CIP-GMR, and do not cross many layers, the adjacent layers must have the antiparallel orientation, i.e. they need an antiferromagnetic coupling. In the case of CPP-GMR the electrons cross all layers, and a random orientation of the layers produces the same high resistant state as the AF-coupled state (“self averaging”). In CIP-GMR the electric field is independent of position in the film, but the current density depends on the perpendicular direction to the film. The characteristic length scale is the longest mean free path. For CPP transport, the electric field depends on the perpendicular position in the film, but the current density is independent of position in the film. The spin diffusion length is the new length scale.

2.6     Scattering Mechanism              
To stress the difference with Fermi transport, we demonstrate the electron energy dependence of the scattering mechanisms in it.
Three important transport processes affect GMR:
1. spin dependent bulk scattering in the magnetic layers
2. spin dependent scattering at the interfaces
3. reflection at the interfaces due to band mismatch between the layers.                                    
The scattering processes leading to bulk scattering have quasi elastic phonon, magnon and elastic defect scattering. The scattering processes leading to diffusive interface scattering are mainly temperature independent elastic defect and impurity scattering. Inelastic electron-electron interactions are neglected both for Fermi transport and hot electrons .Also, phonon and magnon scattering are neglected (low temperature restriction), but may be included when finite temperatures are considered. Since defect and impurity scattering are of the same nature, both interface and bulk scattering may be included in one picture, taking different relaxation times  only. The third process, quantum mechanical reflection at the layer interfaces, is entirely different. CPP transport incorporating the interface and bulk diffusive scattering has been modeled by the series resistor model which was used very effectively to describe the resistance in CPP experimentsThe total resistance is


Here rP and rAP are the CPP resistances per unit area and per superlattice period in the parallel (P) and antiparallel (AP) magnetic configurations respectively. .  and . are used for the majority and minority spin directions in a magnetic layer. r*F  is the experimentally measured bulk resistivity of the ferromagnetic film, r* N is the non-magnetic bulk resistivity and r* b is the spin averaged interface resistance.

2.7   Electron transport in the spin valve transistor  
                            
2.7.1  Schottky (Thermionic) injection: emitter efficiency e                          
             The various ways in which electrons can be transported across a metal-semiconductor junction under forward bias are shown schematically for an n-type semiconductor . The mechanisms are:
(a) emission of electrons from the semiconductor over the top of the barrier into the metal
(b) temperature assisted tunneling through the barrier: thermionic field emission
(c) direct tunneling through the barrier: field emission
(d) recombination in the space charge region
(e) recombination in the neutral region (hole injection)
It is possible to make Schottky barrier diodes in which (a) is the most important transport mechanism and such diodes are generally referred to as “nearly ideal”. Processes (b) and (c) may contribute under high doping and low temperature conditions. Under normal conditions, (c) and (e) hardly contribute. The relative contributions of the other transport processes depend mainly upon temperature, doping and applied bias To analyze the injection of electrons into the base, the electron potential energy as a function of distance from the metal is schematically drawn in Fig. 2.5.                       
                      In Fig. 2.5  qfe is the barrier height and   Dqfe is the emitter barrier lowering due to the electric field and the image force. xl is the point where an electron at rest in the emitter has enough energy to surmount a collector barrier of height fc. Dqfec is the energy difference between the emitter and collector barriers of the full metal base transistor structure.

 Fig. 2.5  Electron potential energy q as a function of distance in a metal semiconductor Schottky barrier and electron transport processes under forward bias condition.                                

As shown in Fig.2.5 the barrier maximum is not at x=0 but at xm. This deviation is due to the image force correction . According to the thermionic emission-diffusion theory the forward transport of electrons according to process (a) can be described as:
……………..(2.9)
where J is the forward current density, IRs is the voltage drop due to series resistance and
……………………(2.10)
is the saturation current density and A** is the effective Richardson constant
The ideality factor n is defined as

        …………….(2.11)           
 which is reflected by the slope of the forward current response. The contribution of transport processes (b), (c), (d) and (e) to the total injection current causes the n-factor to become larger than 1.

2.7.2  qm:Quantum mechanical transmission factor at the collector barrier                                                                                               
            Quantum mechanics allows particles to penetrate an energy barrier larger than its own energy. Also , a particle with energy larger than a potential barrier, may be partly reflected. Because the average electron kinetic energy in the metal is much larger than in the semiconductor due to the addition of the Fermi energy of the metal.This energy is lost in when the electron enters the conduction band of the collector semiconductor. A simple step potential model of the collector Schottky barrier gives some insight in the relative importance of parameters. The relatively large electron energy loss justifies the use of a step potential to model the Schottky barrier. For smaller energy losses when using metals with small Fermi energies such as Cs (1.5eV) would require more correct potential shapes, as presented in Fig. 2.6.

                         Fig. 2.6  Metal semiconductor barrier models


2.7.3 Semiconductor transport: collector efficiency αc  
 The angle of acceptance in the collector is quite small   When electrons are transmitted into the collector within the angle of acceptance, there is a further limitation to collection: electron-phonon scatterings before the collector barrier maximum may throw back the electron into the metal. As in the emitter, within the collector, electrons can scatter by emission of optical phonons. As shown in Fig. 4.6 the position of the Schottky barrier maximum is not at the metallurgical M-S interface but is shifted by a few nm into the semiconductor due to the image potential.                                    
   Electrons with energies just over the threshold for transmission that excite phonons in the region before the Schottky barrier maximum are expected to have a high probability of reentering the metal. Beyond the Schottky barrier maximum, the internal electric field in the depletion region accelerates the electrons toward the interior of n-type semiconductors. Therefore the effect of phonon scattering on the magnitude of Ib in the region beyond the Schottky barrier maximum depends on the doping density of the semiconductor, since this defines the length of the depletion region and thus the acceleration rate.

   Fig. 2.7 Collector Schottky barrier under reverse bias showing the maximum of the barrier at xm resulting from image force lowering and reverse transport mechanisms (a) thermionic emission (b) thermionic field emission and (c) field emission.                                   

2.7.4  Impact ionization: avalanche multiplication             
  Once the kinetic energy of the electrons in the collector semiconductor exceeds Eg, electron-hole pair generation, or impact ionization, becomes possible, see Fig. 4.7. This process is usually employed in Avalanche Photodiodes (APDs) to increase the detector current. This process can also take place in metal base transistor structures, and has recently been observed as a parasitic process in BEEM experiment. In reverse biased Schottky diodes ,breakdown may occur due to tunneling or avalanche breakdown. When the electric field in a semiconductor is increased above a certain value, the carriers gain enough energy so that they can excite electron-hole pairs by impact ionization.
            Fig. 2.8  Electron-hole pair generation in the reverse biased collector barrier.                           
The electron-hole pair generation rate G for impact ionization is given by
          ………………..(2.12)             
                 Where an is the electron ionization rate defined as the number of electron-hole pairs generated by an electron per unit distance traveled. Similarly ap is the analogously defined ionization rate for holes. a n,p is strongly field dependent as can be observed in the physical expression for the ionization rate
               …………………(2.13)                                             where Ei is the high field, effective ionization threshold energy, F the electric field, and FkT, Fp and Fi are the threshold fields for carriers to overcome the decelerating effects of thermal (phonon), optical phonon and ionization scattering, respectively. For Si, the value Ei is found to be 3.6 eV for electrons and 5eV for holes.

2.7.5  Schottky reverse saturation current: collector leakage current Jbc
 The reverse current of the collector barrier can be considered to be a parasitic current which limits detection of the hot electron current in the collector under certain conditions. The principal leakage current is determined by electrons which have a thermal energy larger than the barrier height. Obviously this current is very sensitive to temperature and was deduced from the thermionic emission theory as                                   
  …………….(2.14)
 where A** is the effective Richardson constant  
A plot of the calculated saturation current versus barrier height for Si is shown in                                                                                  Fig 2.9
Fig. 2.9  saturation current density Js versus barrier height, at T=77, 200 and 295K. A** has been  taken 112 (A cm²K²) for Si.

2.8  Vacuum bonding: Spin valve transistor preparation

2.8.1  Schematic process flow                          
  In vaccum bonding   initially cleaning process is done.For this  1 micron tetra ethyl ortho silicate (TEOS) SiO2 is used as protecting layer and the Si fragments are etched away using HF/HNO3 at room temperature isotropic etch.Preparation scheme is shown in figure 2.10.


Fig2.10 Schematic process flow for the preparation of vacuum bonded spin valve transistors
2.8.2 Deposition of the base layers
For deposition of the base layers a DC-RF magnetron sputtering machine is used. The robot is inserted into loadlock F and transported using beam G to the main chamber A after approximately 1 hour pumping. Multilayers can be deposited using a computer controlled rotating table and deposition shutters.

             Fig. 2.11 High vacuum DC/RF magnetron sputter system.
                                         
 The properties of the system are: background pressure typically 10-9 mbar, three magnetron sputter guns, variable substrate-target distance, heated substrate table, RF and DC power supplies. Twelve different samples can be sputtered in one run using the specially designed substrate rotator, of which a schematic picture is shown in Fig. 4.9.


     Fig.2.12 Substrate rotator for multiple in-situ sample preparation.
   Spring 1 is wound up using manipulator 2. Samples 6 are mounted on rotating table 4. Deposition occurs via 5. Substrate selection is via magnetically coupled beam 3. In this way optimized GMR multilayers and sandwiches can be found quickly.

2.8.3 Emitter wafer thinning                                      
 After bonding, the emitter substrate has to be thinned down to dimensions which allow definition of transistors to micron dimensions. For this reason, the emitter has to be thinned down to about 1 to 5 micron. A major requirement is that the emitter substrate needs a highly doped region for ohmic contact formation (the emitter barrier contact is reverse biased, in contrast to the collector contact). In so called BESOI (Bond and Etch back Silicon On Insulator) several techniques are known to come to a small device layer: 1. Grinding and polishing 2. Etch stop layers
Grinding and polishing is a possibility for the required device layer thickness, and would be the most obvious way for standard wafer size. Thickness variations of about 0.5 microns are achievable. In grinding one has to be careful with subsurface damage and the final etching has to be performed chemo-mechanically.  However for small samples  chemo mechanical polishing is not used.
  Using etch stop layers thickness variation of about 5 microns is obtainedEtch stops using HF anodic etching usually provide fast etching of p type and n++ type, so in this case an etch stop on n++ is not possible. Moreover, it is difficult to grow defect free device n-layers wafers on a buried n++ layer, sufficiently high doped for ohmic contact formation. This problem also plays a role in etch stops using highly B doped p++ Si and KOH, TMAH or EPW. Another disadvantage of this technique is that it is difficult to grow defect free layers on top of this layer .Addition of larger Ge to the B atoms provides stress free etch stop layers without misfit dislocations. Electrochemical etch stops using P/N junctions require KOH etching at elevated temperatures with the additional buried n++ layer problem.

2.8.4  Completed spin valve transistor structure
Following emitter thinning, the base region is defined using photolithography: photoresist prebaked at 90C was used to protect the base either during wet etching (10:HO/1:HF) during 20 seconds (for Co/Cu) or using ion beam etching during 30 minutes. To reduce the large sputter induced leakage currents after ion beam etching, a short TMAH silicon etch is necessary to remove the damaged silicon surface next to the base. For the HO/HF base etch this is not required since it does not introduce defects and grows a surface passivating SiO automatically. Since the HO/HF tends to attack the photoresist, care has to be taken not to etch longer than 1 minute. After the base etching procedure, the substrate is glued using conducting room temperature curing epoxy with its backside ohmic contact to a printed circuit board, aluminum wires are ultrasonically bonded to the base and emitters and is ready for electrical characterization .

2.8.5  Processing other semiconductors
                Experiments with Germanium collectors have also been performed. The difference in preparation before metal deposition with Si is that Ge can be etched using HF/HO (1/10). This etchant does not attack photoresist  and consequently, the surface can be protected with a single (hardbaked) photoresist layer. First experiments with epitaxially grown n-GaAs films on n+ GaAs substrates have also provided excellent bonds. Photoresist was employed to offer protection during a HSO/HO/H0 fragment etch. There are new ways to obtain both a very clean GaAs surface and very good Schottky barriers: an AlAs layer has been grown in situ over the epitaxial GaAs layer, providing protection of the GaAs surface. (it is even possible to use a buried AlAs layer as an etch stop with citric acid/HO etchants .This top layer is removed using a very selective HF 2% (1 min) dip as a final cleaning step prior to bonding. We found nearly ideal Schottky barriers using this method. Another technique for preparing ideal Schottky barriers on GaAs involves substrate heating (550C)  before deposition .

2.9     Other spin-valve configurations

2.9.1  Granular GMR
    As indicated, it is very difficult to measure perpendicular transport GMR. An intermediate between in-plane and perpendicular GMR can be created by making small ferromagnetic grains in a metallic matrix. A sketch of such a system is given in  Fig. 6.1

Fig. 2.13 Sketch of granular GMR (G2MR). The high resistant state can be the uncoupled random state of magnetic granule
 In granular systems the ferromagnetic particles are assumed to be single domain and uncoupled. In this case the resistance will be largest for randomly oriented particles, which occurs when the total magnetization of the sample is zero, and lowest at applied saturation field Hs. The GMR in granular systems in independent of the direction of the applied field, unlike in multi layers where the saturating field is larger for perpendicular fields, than for in-plane fields. The MR is mostly due to spin dependent grain-matrix interface scattering and to a lesser extent, from spin dependent scattering within the magnetic grains. The major disadvantage of granular systems is the saturation field which is usually very large .. However, this causes local pinholes in the nonmagnetic spacer layers to be filled with ferromagnetic material, inducing ferromagnetic bridging between the magnetic layers. This effect is decreased when the ferromagnetic layers consist of clusters ,because the ferromagnetic bridging does not proceed across the whole magnetic layer, but is limited to one granule. For the spin-valve transistor this separation of magnetic layers in clusters to avoid ferromagnetic bridging is not required, since the spacer layer can be made thick enough

2.9.2  Inverse GMR
When the resistance of a spin valve system increases under application of a magnetic field, it is said to be inverse GMR. However, this effect may be related to three principles: The first is the anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) which may lead to parasitic effects, and which may, depending on current-field angle, produce an inverse behaviour. The second is the simple observation that the magnetisation of the magnetic layers orient more into antiparallel directions, like in Co/Cu multilayers going from zero field to the coercive field.. The third effect is of more relevance: it is related to the band structure of certain materials that cause inverse spin asymmetry. The inverse GMR effects can be accounted for qualitatively by opposite scattering spin asymmetries in Co (positive spin asymmetry) and A (negative spin asymmetry) (A is an alloy). For two layers with both positive spin asymmetry, high resistance is observed, ergo normal GMR. If however the lower magnetic layer is replaced by an alloy with negative spin asymmetry, electrons that passed freely through the first layer can also pass the second layer, and now the antiparallel situation represents a low resistance state, hence inverse GMR. Quantitatively the inverse effect can be accounted for by introducing bulk and interface spin asymmetry coefficients as in CPP-GMR, and respectively.

2.9.3  Magnetic tunnel junctions: MTJs    
Electrons are able to pass from one conducting electrode (initial electrode) to another (final electrode) via a thin insulator (1-5 nm) with an energy barrier larger than the electron energy. This quantum transport phenomenon is called electron tunneling. Instead of a Schottky barrier to create hot electrons in the spin valve base, the spin valve transistor can also be made using incorporation of a tunneling emitter A tunnel collector could also be opted for, as in MOMOM (M=metal, O=oxide) high speed devices. A magnetic tunnel junction acting as emitter could add extra magnetic field dependence to the collector current change, since the transmission of the tunnel structure as well as the transfer characteristics in the base spin valve add constructively. In case of an antiferromagnetic tunnel barrier such as NiO or CoO, the tunnel injection could be combined with the pinning abilities, to construct exchange biased spin valves in the base.
In the normal case magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) consist of a ferromagnetic initial electrode, an oxidic barrier and again a ferromagnetic final electrode.With no voltage applied the Fermi levels of the two electrodes must align. Under application of a bias, a voltage drop V and energy level difference eV across the insulator is found. The current is found using Fermi’s golden rule: the number of electrons tunneling is given by the product of the density of filled states at a given energy in one electrode and the density of empty states in the other electrode at the same energy multiplied by the square
of a matrix element describing the probability of tunneling. For this model the total current from the initial electrode to the final electrode is proportional to
                                                                                    ………….(2.14)
  In the model proposed by Julliere, it is assumed that the spin is conserved in the tunneling process and that the conductance of each spin direction is proportional to the density of states of that spin in each electrode. In this model one expects the tunneling current to be larger when magnetizations are parallel as compared to antiparallel orientations. The conductances of the junctions are then:

……………..(2.15)
……………..(2.16)
I(ap)par the current in the (anti)parallel case, where Ni the number of available electrons on the injecting electrode and Df the number of available empty sites in the DOS of the collecting electrode.
This situation may be illustrated graphically:


Fig.2.14 Illustration of effect in magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) consisting of two ferromagnetic electrodes separated by an insulator. In the case of parallel magnetisations, Ni,up*Df,up>0, hence acurrent may be flowing. In the antiparallel case, Df,up=0 and Ni,down=0, consequently zero current.
                                                                                                                                                                                        2.10 Advantages
  1. Traditional  transistors use on and off currents to create bits the binary zero and one of computer information, quantum spin valve transistor will use up and down spin states to generate the same binary data.
  2.  Currently logic is usually carried out using conventional electrons, while spin is used for memory. Spintronics will combine both.
  3. In most semi conducting  transistors the relative proportion of  up and down carrier types are equal. If  ferromagnetic material is used as the carrier source then the ratio can be deliberately skewed in one direction.
  4. Amplification and/or switching properties of the device can be controlled by  the external magnetic field applied to the device.
  5. One of the problems of charge current electrons is that we pack more devices together, chip heats up. Spin current releases heat but it is rather less

2.11   Applications
1            Spin valve transistors have  huge potential for incoporatio in stable, high sensitivity  magnetic field sensors for automotive , robotic , mechanical  engineering and  data  storage  applications.     
2                 It finds its application towards quantum computer, a new trend in computing here we use qubits instead of bits.Qubit exploit spin up and spin down states as super positions of zero and one.
3                 They have the advantage over conventional semi conductor chips that do not require power to maintain their memory state.
4                 This may  also be used as Magnetically controlled parametric amplifiers and mixers, as magnetic signal processors for control of brush less dc motors as magnetic logic elements.

2.12   Related work
Scientists  have recently proposed new class of spin transistors, referred to as spin-filter transistor (SFT) and spin metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (spin MOSFET), and their integrated circuit applications.  The fundamental device structures and theoretically predicted device performance are theoretically calculated predicted.  The spin MOSFETs potentially exhibit significant magnetotransport effect such as large magneto-current and also satisfy important requirements for integrated circuit applications such as high transconductance, low power-delay product, and low off-current.  Since the spin MOSFETs can perform signal processing and logic operations and can store digital data using both of the charge transport and the spin degree of freedom, they are expected to be building blocks for a memory cell and logic gates on spin-electronic integrated circuits.  Novel spin-electronic integrated circuit architectures for nonvolatile memory and reconfigurable logic employing spin MOSFETs are also proposed
 Now  researcher Christian Schoenenberger and colleagues at the University of  Basel, Switzerland, describe a carbon nanotube transistor operating on a same principle, opening a promising avenue toward the introduction of spin-based devices into computer chips. A  device consisting of a single carbon nanotube connected  to two magnetic electrodes that control the orientation  of the electrons’ spins have been developed.

2.13   Future scope
There are major efforts on going at ibm, Motorola in developing RAM based on spin valves, such devices called MRAMs have demonstrated faster speeds, high density ,low power consumptions and nonvolatility. They are promising replacement for semi conducting rams currently used
                                           Also  reserches   are going  on to replace Pt with suitable combinations of metal (low cost alloys ) in order to make it affordable at minimum cost.


























CHAPTER-3
CONCLUSION
   Now it is clear that spin valve transistor is more versatile  and more robust but it needs further fabrication methods to improve magnetic sensitivity of collector current. The greatest hurdle for spintronic engineers may be controlling  all that spin. To  do it on a single transistor is already feasible, while to do it on a whole cicuit will require some clever ideas.  In the spin-valve transistor perpendicular GMR can be measured down to tri-layers. Exponential amplification of the magnetoresistance occurs because the transfer is exponentially dependent on the electron mean free path in the base. Electron energy can be varied so electron spectroscopy can be performed by changing emitter Schottky barrier height (or tunnel bias). Measurements can be done at cryogenic and room temperature. Since the scattering processes appear as products in the transfer equation., the spin dependent scattering centers can be located accurately and, in contrast to common CPP-MR, the relative change in collector current CC(%) is not decreased by spin independent scattering processes such as in the Cu layers or in the semiconductors.However the key question will be whether any potential benefit of such technology will be worth the production cost. Spin valve transistors and other spin devices will become affordable by using common metals.

















 REFERENCES

  1. Dr S.S. Verma ,” Spintronics for the Ultimate in Performance”   Electronics for 
           You ,  VOL. 34 NO. 8.August 2002, Pages 110-11