A new way to enhance the capacity of memory devices (Nanowerk News) Tomsk Polytechnic University's study (Nature Communications, "Three-dimensional imaging of vortex structure in a ferroelectric nanoparticle driven by an electric field") reveals how topological vortices found in low-dimensional materials can be both displaced and erased and restored again by the electrical field within nanoparticles. This may open exciting opportunities for memory devices or quantum computers in which information will be encrypted in the characteristics of topological vortices.

Scientists from TPU and scientific centers of the USA, China and Germany have discovered unusual self-organization of atoms in the volume of nanoparticles and have learned to control it by electric field. Such "controlled" nanoparticles can be used to generate capacious non-volatile random access memory (NRAM), quantum computers and other next generation electronics.

Vortices in nanoparticles exposed by the electrical field.

The main author is Dmitriy Karpov, engineer of the Department of General Physics, TPU, who explains that in modern materials science the defects of matter are divided into two large groups. The first group includes classical, well-studied defects, when atoms in matter are mechanically disordered, i.e. some atoms are removed or, on the contrary, inserted in the lattice. The other group doesnt have any significant changes. Instead, the spatial organization of the lattice itself changes and such defects are called topological.

Topological defects can strongly influence the matter making it superfluid or superconductive, and therefore it is very important to study them. Topological defects can be found only in low-dimensional materials: two-dimensional nanorods and nanofilms (just several atoms thick) and one-dimensional nanodots or nanoparticles which are spherical particles consisting of several tens or hundreds of identical atoms.

One of the important topological defects is a topological vortex which looks like a discernible twisting caused by a small displacement of all atoms.

The vortex core is a nanostrand which can be both displaced by the field, and erased and restored again within nanoparticles, explains Edwin Fohtung, Professor of Los Alamos National Laboratory and New Mexico State University .

The scientists studied barium titanate nanoparticles whose internal structure was visualized with the help of penetrating X-ray radiation from the synchrotron Advanced Photon Source (Chicago, USA). They obtained the image of the volume of nanoparticles with the resolution of 18 nanometers, which enabled to analyze the slightest changes in the structure. As a result, the researchers showed that external electric field can displace the core of the topological vortex inside the nanoparticle, and when the field is removed, it returns to its original position.

Modern components of electronics are gradually becoming smaller and smaller. This can significantly influence the efficiency of devices which will be significantly reduced due to different quantum effects. One way to circumvent these limitations is to use topological vortices. Thus, they can be used to generate high density NRAM or quantum computers in which information will be encrypted in the characteristics of topological vortices.