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Dive into the research topics where Gregory D. Fuchs is active.

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Featured researches published by Gregory D. Fuchs.


Nature Physics | 2007

Magnetic vortex oscillator driven by d.c. spin-polarized current

Vlad Pribiag; I. N. Krivorotov; Gregory D. Fuchs; P. M. Braganca; O. Ozatay; Jack C. Sankey; D. C. Ralph; R. A. Buhrman

Transfer of angular momentum from a spin-polarized current to a ferromagnet provides an efficient means to control the magnetization dynamics of nanomagnets. A peculiar consequence of this spin torque, the ability to induce persistent oscillations in a nanomagnet by applying a d.c. current, has previously been reported only for spatially uniform nanomagnets. Here, we demonstrate that a quintessentially non-uniform magnetic structure, a magnetic vortex, isolated within a nanoscale spin-valve structure, can be excited into persistent microwave-frequency oscillations by a spin-polarized d.c. current. Comparison with micromagnetic simulations leads to identification of the oscillations with a precession of the vortex core. The oscillations, which can be obtained in essentially zero magnetic field, exhibit linewidths that can be narrower than 300 kHz at ∼1.1 GHz, making these highly compact spin-torque vortex-oscillator devices potential candidates for microwave signal-processing applications, and a powerful new tool for fundamental studies of vortex dynamics in magnetic nanostructures.


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Spin-transfer effects in nanoscale magnetic tunnel junctions

Gregory D. Fuchs; N. C. Emley; I. N. Krivorotov; P. M. Braganca; E. M. Ryan; S. I. Kiselev; Jack C. Sankey; D. C. Ralph; R. A. Buhrman; J. A. Katine

We report measurements of magnetic switching and steady-state magnetic precession driven by spin-polarized currents in nanoscale magnetic tunnel junctions with low-resistance, <5Ωμm2, barriers. The current densities required for magnetic switching are similar to values for all-metallic spin-valve devices. In the tunnel junctions, spin-transfer-driven switching can occur at voltages that are high enough to quench the tunnel magnetoresistance, demonstrating that the current remains spin polarized at these voltages.


Nano Letters | 2010

Chip-Scale Nanofabrication of Single Spins and Spin Arrays in Diamond

D.M. Toyli; C. D. Weis; Gregory D. Fuchs; T. Schenkel; D. D. Awschalom

We demonstrate a technique to nanofabricate nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in diamond based on broad-beam nitrogen implantation through apertures in electron beam lithography resist. This method enables high-throughput nanofabrication of single NV centers on sub-100-nm length scales. Secondary ion mass spectroscopy measurements facilitate depth profiling of the implanted nitrogen to provide three-dimensional characterization of the NV center spatial distribution. Measurements of NV center coherence with on-chip coplanar waveguides suggest a pathway for incorporating this scalable nanofabrication technique in future quantum applications.


Science | 2009

Gigahertz Dynamics of a Strongly Driven Single Quantum Spin

Gregory D. Fuchs; V. V. Dobrovitski; D.M. Toyli; F. J. Heremans; D. D. Awschalom

Quick Spin Flips Quantum computation holds the tantalizing promise of vastly improving the efficiency of traditional computers. Among the many solid-state candidates for storing and manipulating quantum information, nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond are especially attractive because they can be used at room temperature and stay operational for milliseconds at a time. To use this coherence time efficiently, it is important to achieve fast manipulation of the spins in the system. Fuchs et al. (p. 1520, published online 19 November; see the Perspective by Gerardot and Öhberg) used pulses of strong microwave magnetic field to probe the dynamics of single spins in a nitrogen vacancy center. In this “strong-driving” nonlinear regime, extremely quick spin flips of less than a nanosecond in duration were observed, offering the possibility that up to a million operations could be performed on a single spin during its coherence time. Fast spin-flips are observed in the nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond. Two-level systems are at the core of numerous real-world technologies such as magnetic resonance imaging and atomic clocks. Coherent control of the state is achieved with an oscillating field that drives dynamics at a rate determined by its amplitude. As the strength of the field is increased, a different regime emerges where linear scaling of the manipulation rate breaks down and complex dynamics are expected. By calibrating the spin rotation with an adiabatic passage, we have measured the room-temperature “strong-driving” dynamics of a single nitrogen vacancy center in diamond. With an adiabatic passage to calibrate the spin rotation, we observed dynamics on sub-nanosecond time scales. Contrary to conventional thinking, this breakdown of the rotating wave approximation provides opportunities for time-optimal quantum control of a single spin.


Applied Physics Letters | 2005

Adjustable spin torque in magnetic tunnel junctions with two fixed layers

Gregory D. Fuchs; I. N. Krivorotov; P. M. Braganca; N. C. Emley; A. G. F. Garcia; D. C. Ralph; R. A. Buhrman

We have fabricated nanoscale magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) with an additional fixed magnetic layer added above the magnetic free layer of a standard MTJ structure. This acts as a second source of spin-polarized electrons that, depending on the relative alignment of the two fixed layers, either augments or diminishes the net spin torque exerted on the free layer. The compound structure allows a quantitative comparison of spin torque from tunneling electrons and from electrons passing through metallic spacer layers, as well as analysis of Joule self-heating effects. This has significance for current-switched magnetic random access memory, where spin torque is exploited and, for magnetic sensing, where it is detrimental.


Science | 2010

Spin-Light Coherence for Single-Spin Measurement and Control in Diamond

Bob B. Buckley; Gregory D. Fuchs; Lee C. Bassett; D. D. Awschalom

Dressing-Up Diamond Defects The spin states of nitrogen vacancy defects in diamond are being explored as information carriers and memories in quantum information systems. Their long lifetimes, fast manipulation rates, and the ability to couple them to adjacent electronic and nuclear spins provide the necessary properties for implementation in solid-state quantum networks. To date, however, the readout of the spin state via photoluminescence, either directly or indirectly, results in the destruction of the spin state. Buckley et al. (p. 1212, published online 14 October; see the Perspective by Milburn) have formed a light-matter hybrid state in which the spin interacts with laser light to form a polariton state. This hybrid state can be optically probed to produce a nondestructive measurement and manipulation technique for the spin state of the nitrogen-vacancy center. Optical pulses were used to nondestructively probe and manipulate the spin state of nitrogen vacancy defects in diamond. The exceptional spin coherence of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond motivates their function in emerging quantum technologies. Traditionally, the spin state of individual centers is measured optically and destructively. We demonstrate dispersive, single-spin coupling to light for both nondestructive spin measurement, through the Faraday effect, and coherent spin manipulation, through the optical Stark effect. These interactions can enable the coherent exchange of quantum information between single nitrogen-vacancy spins and light, facilitating coherent measurement, control, and entanglement that is scalable over large distances.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Excited-State Spectroscopy Using Single Spin Manipulation in Diamond

Gregory D. Fuchs; V. V. Dobrovitski; R. Hanson; A. Batra; C. D. Weis; T. Schenkel; D. D. Awschalom

We use single-spin resonant spectroscopy to study the spin structure in the orbital excited state of a diamond nitrogen-vacancy (N-V) center at room temperature. The data show that the excited-state spin levels have a zero-field splitting that is approximately half of the value of the ground state levels, a g factor similar to the ground state value, and a hyperfine splitting approximately 20x larger than in the ground state. In addition, the width of the resonances reflects the electronic lifetime in the excited state. We also show that the spin level splitting can significantly differ between N-V centers, likely due to the effects of local strain, which provides a pathway to control over the spin Hamiltonian and may be useful for quantum-information processing.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance measurements of damping in nanomagnets

Gregory D. Fuchs; Jack C. Sankey; Vlad Pribiag; L. Qian; P. M. Braganca; A. G. F. Garcia; E. M. Ryan; Zhi Pan Li; O. Ozatay; D. C. Ralph; R. A. Buhrman

The authors directly measure the magnetic damping parameter α in thin-film CoFeB and Permalloy (Py) nanomagnets at room temperature using a recently developed ferromagnetic resonance technique where the precessional mode of an individual nanomagnet can be excited by microwave-frequency spin-transfer torque and detected by the giant magnetoresistance effect. The authors obtain αCoFeB=0.014±0.003 and αPy=0.010±0.002, values comparable to measurements for extended thin films, establishing that patterned nanomagnets can exhibit magnetic damping that is consistent with that of unpatterned bulk material.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2016

High Dynamic Range Pixel Array Detector for Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy

Mark W. Tate; Prafull Purohit; Darol Chamberlain; Kayla X. Nguyen; Robert Hovden; Celesta S. Chang; Pratiti Deb; Emrah Turgut; John Heron; Darrell G. Schlom; D. C. Ralph; Gregory D. Fuchs; Katherine S. Shanks; Hugh T. Philipp; David A. Muller; Sol M. Gruner

We describe a hybrid pixel array detector (electron microscope pixel array detector, or EMPAD) adapted for use in electron microscope applications, especially as a universal detector for scanning transmission electron microscopy. The 128×128 pixel detector consists of a 500 µm thick silicon diode array bump-bonded pixel-by-pixel to an application-specific integrated circuit. The in-pixel circuitry provides a 1,000,000:1 dynamic range within a single frame, allowing the direct electron beam to be imaged while still maintaining single electron sensitivity. A 1.1 kHz framing rate enables rapid data collection and minimizes sample drift distortions while scanning. By capturing the entire unsaturated diffraction pattern in scanning mode, one can simultaneously capture bright field, dark field, and phase contrast information, as well as being able to analyze the full scattering distribution, allowing true center of mass imaging. The scattering is recorded on an absolute scale, so that information such as local sample thickness can be directly determined. This paper describes the detector architecture, data acquisition system, and preliminary results from experiments with 80-200 keV electron beams.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Mechanical spin control of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond.

Tanay A. Gosavi; Nicholas R. Jungwirth; Sunil A. Bhave; Gregory D. Fuchs

We demonstrate direct coupling between phonons and diamond nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center spins by driving spin transitions with mechanically generated harmonic strain at room temperature. The amplitude of the mechanically driven spin signal varies with the spatial periodicity of the stress standing wave within the diamond substrate, verifying that we drive NV center spins mechanically. These spin-phonon interactions could offer a route to quantum spin control of magnetically forbidden transitions, which would enhance NV-based quantum metrology, grant access to direct transitions between all of the spin-1 quantum states of the NV center, and provide a platform to study spin-phonon interactions at the level of a few interacting spins.

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Emrah Turgut

University of Colorado Boulder

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T. Schenkel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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C. D. Weis

University of California

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