New functional photonic materials and devices based on magnetism (Nanowerk News) Digital information technology has great impact on our lives that has strongly motivated scientists to look for faster and more energy-efficient ways to process streams of digital signals. Recently, electrical engineers has proposed using not just electricity but also light to send the signals even inside semiconductor chips, and condensed matter physicists are studying ways of exploiting the spin instead of the charge of electrons for electronic devices.

Notably, nothing travels faster than light in our universe and spins generates far less heat during the transmission of magnetic signals. However, there is major problem when both light and spins meet to form a powerful tag team: interaction between light and spins is weaker than that between light and charges.

Now, members of the spin-photonics team at Tokyo Tech including KosukeYamamoto, a master's course graduate student at the School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering, Yoshitaka Kitamoto, professor at the same school, and Hiro Munekata, professor at the Imaging Science and Engineering Laboratory (ISEL) and the leader of the team, have found through the study of photo-excited precession of magnetization using ultrashort (10 -13 sec) weak laser pulses of 1µJ/cm 2 or less, that spins in ultra-thin Co/Pd multi-layer films are very susceptible to light; namely, a material that could be a candidate for photo-sensitive magnets ("Low-power photo-induced precession of magnetization in ultra-thin Co/Pd multi-layer films").

These findings were soon followed by the demonstration of polarization modulation of light signals in an optical waveguide with the same class of magnets, where this work was carried out by Kazuhiro Nishibayashi, a lecturer at ISEL and member of spin-photonic team, in collaboration with Hitoki Yoneda, professor at the University of Electro-Communications, and Atsushi Kuga, at the researcher of Science and Technology Research Laboratories, Japan Broadcasting Corporation. In this work ("Demonstration of polarization modulated signals in a multi-mode GdFe-silica hybrid fiber"), Nishibayashi has emphasized the feasibility of the multiplexed transmission of polarization-modulated signals, controlled ultimately by photo-excitation of a class of light-sensitive magnetic layers.

Experimental data of photo-excited precession of magnetization (left), schematic illustration of Co/Pd ultra-thin multi-layers (upper center), and the concept of three-terminal photonic device utilizing photo-magnetic property (lower right). (click on image to enlarge)

Munekata and Kitamoto started their work by discussing a class of materials in which interaction between electron orbitals and spin is strong, and later, when Yamamoto joined them, they decided to focus on the interface of Co and Pd, where the spin states are strongly sensitive to the slight charge imbalance at the Co/Pd interface. Illumination with a femto-second laser pulse in the ultra-short time regime, enabled them to successfully modulate the charge imbalance and vary the direction of spin ordering instantaneously. This has given rise to clear observations of oscillatory signals due to precession of ordered spins.

It is very common to use a light beam propagating in free space for studying the interactions between light and matter. In an optical waveguide, however, light propagates through strong and weak propagation channels-so called mode-propagation of light- as a consequence of interference induced by light partially reflected at sidewalls of the waveguide. Therefore, it is not straight forward to engineer the interaction between light and spins with light propagating through an optical waveguide. Experimental results obtained by Nishibayashi and colleagues show that specific points of spin in a magnetic film interact with selected modes of light, which is one of the unique points found in a magnet-waveguide system.