New magnetic materials set to attract electrical industry New magnetic materials set to attract electrical industry - news feed from the Electrical News Portal
(20/06/2014)

Hybrid materials that change magnetism with small shifts in temperature hold immense potential for computer memory systems and transformers, according to a seminar at the forthcoming CWIEME Berlin exhibition.

A team of researchers led by Professor Ivan K. Schuller at the University of California, San Diego has developed a new breed of magnetic materials with profound implications for the electrical and electronics industries. Even without a magnetic field, these materials have the ability to change from insulators to conductors and vice versa within a very narrow temperature range – providing a new mechanism for controlling magnetism.

“Discovering new materials is not an easy business – and discovering materials that happen to have the exact properties you need for a certain application is practically impossible,” says Prof. Schuller. “Our approach is to combine two naturally-occurring materials, whose properties we already understand, to create a third material – a so-called hybrid with different and perhaps useful properties.”
Most recently, Prof. Schuller and his team have discovered that by combining thin layers of oxides, such as vanadium oxide, with magnetic materials such as cobalt, nickel or iron, they can create a structure that is remarkably responsive to heat. The oxide, typically an insulator, becomes more like the magnetic material and the magnetic material more like the oxide.

The properties of these magnetic oxide hybrids and their potential for both the electrical and electronics industries will be the subject of a seminar by Prof. Schuller at this year’s CWIEME Berlin, the world’s largest electrical manufacturing exhibition.

Although it is too early to predict exactly how these new magnetic materials will be used, Prof. Schuller sees two clear opportunities: in computer memory systems and in transformers.

The next generation of computer memory systems that are being developed use high temperatures generated by lasers to manipulate magnetic properties. Schuller’s sensitive magnetic oxide hybrids would eliminate the need for such high temperatures.

Magnetic oxide hybrids could also be used to build a replacement for current fault limiters in transmission lines in case of a lightning strike or power surge. Once the danger is over and the temperature returns to normal the power distribution system would automatically resume service.

My team and I have been carrying out very basic research. We are not looking at applications at all – but the industry needs to understand where science is heading and its possible disruptive effects,” says Prof. Schuller. “I cannot say how this research will change our lives – that’s for the electrical engineers to decide – but I can guarantee that it will.”

Award-winning physicist

Solid state physicist, Professor Ivan K. Schuller is the Director of the Center for Advanced Nanoscience (CAN) at the University of California, San Diego. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of Chile, his PhD from Northwestern University and holds an Honoris Causa Doctorate from the Spanish Universidad Complutense. He is a member of the Chilean, Spanish, Belgian and Colombian Academies of Science and has more than 500 papers and 20 patents to his name. Prof. Schuller has won several major awards such as the Lawrence Award from the US Department of Energy as well as several other awards from the American Physical Society, the Materials Research Society and the International Union of Materials Research Societies. Prof Schuller has also won several EMMY and other television awards for his science-related movies.
Chloe Theobald, content manager for CWIEME Berlin says: “Professor Schuller’s seminar is an excellent reminder that CWIEME Berlin is not just for sales and procurement teams. It’s an invaluable opportunity for designers and engineers to hear about the latest academic research from the very best in their field, ensuring their technological developments always remain ahead of the curve.”

Prof. Schuller will be presenting ‘Breakthroughs in magnetic and semi-conductor material: bilayer and the implications for the electrification of industry and society’ at CWIEME Central on Wednesday 25th June, 11:50-12:30.
CWIEME Central seminars are held in English and free for all CWIEME Berlin visitors to attend.

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