Magnetic Nanowires: Revolutionizing Hard Drives, RAM, and Cancer Treatment

KEC 1007  ** Note the different time and place **
Thu, 11/19/2015 - 3:00pm

Bethanie Stadler
Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of
Minnesota

Abstract:
Magnetic nanowires can have many names: bits, sensors, heads, artificial
cilia, sensors, and nano-bots. These applications require nanometer control
of dimensions, while incorporating various metals and alloys. To realize this
control, 7- to 200-nm diameter nanowires are synthesized within insulating
matrices by direct electrochemistry. Our nanowires can easily have lengths
10,000x their diameters, and they are often layered with magnetic and
non-magnetic metals as required by each application. This talk will reveal
synthesis secrets for nm-control of layer thicknesses, even for difficult
alloys, which has enabled studies of magnetization reversal,
magneto-elasticity, giant magnetoresistance, and spin transfer torque
switching. These nanowires will mitigate the ITRS Roadmap’s “Size
Effect” Grand Challenge which identifies the high resistivities in small
interconnects as a barrier to continued progress along Moore’s Law (or
better). High magnetoresistance is also possible in other multilayered
nanowires that exhibit excellent properties for mulit-level nonvolatile
random access memory. If the insulating growth matrix is etched away, the
nanowires resemble a magnetic bed of nano-seaweed which enables microfluidic
flow sensors and vibration sensors. Finally, we have incubated various
nanowires with several healthy and cancerous cell lines, and find that they
are readily internalized. Careful magnetic design of these “nano-bots”
enables external steering, nano-barcode identification, and several modes of
therapy.

Bio:


URL:
http://eecs.oregonstate.edu/colloquium/magnetic-nanowires-revolutionizing-hard-drives-ram-and-cancer-treatment

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