The present invention relates to a magnetic sensor using spin transfer torque devices and, more particularly, to a magnetic sensor that can respond linearly to the strength of a magnetic field by applying bipolar pulses to a spin transfer torque device and thereby controlling a coercive field.
Furthermore, the present invention relates to a magnetic sensor that can shift a dynamic range by a magnetic field corresponding to an offset bias by applying the offset bias together with bipolar pulses and that can control sensitivity by adjusting the amplitude and strength of bipolar pulses.
A magnetic sensor measures the magnitude or direction of a magnetic field based on a phenomenon in which the magnetic susceptibility or magnetic resistance of a material varies in response to a magnetic field. Generally used magnetic sensors include Hall magnetic sensors using the Hall effect, giant magnetoresistance (GMR) sensors using the GMR phenomenon, tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) sensors, fluxgate magnetic sensors, superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUID) sensors, etc. The uses of these magnetic sensors are determined depending on their characteristics, such as a dynamic range or sensitivity. GMR sensors and TMR sensors can detect a 100 Gauss-level magnetic field with high sensitivity and, additionally, can be fabricated in a very small size, such as a micro-scale size, so that they are chiefly used to read information from hard disk drives (HDDs). Meanwhile, fluxgate magnetic sensors can be fabricated as sensors of various sizes ranging from large-sized sensors to several hundred micrometer-level small-sized sensors and, additionally, can detect a 10 Gauss-level magnetic field with high sensitivity, so that they are used for the purposes of geomagnetic sensors or electronic compasses.
GMR sensors measure a magnetic field by measuring a variation in resistance using a phenomenon in which in a magnetic multilayer film structure composed of a “magnetic layer/a nonmagnetic layer/a magnetic layer,” a large amount of current flows because of low electric resistance when the magnetization directions of the two magnetic layers are made parallel (hereinafter this state is referred to as the “P” state) by an external magnetic field and a small amount of current flows because of high electric resistance when the magnetization directions of the two magnetic layers are made anti-parallel (hereinafter this state is referred to as the “AP” state).
In contrast to the fact that a conventional GMR sensor is sensitive to a magnetic field, the direction of magnetization may be varied by applying a current (a spin current). This is related to spin transfer torque (STT). The spin of each conduction electron that forms a current is polarized while the current is passing through a magnetic layer. In this case, since spin angular momentum is always conserved, force corresponding to a variation in the spin angular momentum of the conduction electron is transferred to the spin of a magnetic layer, and thus torque that changes the magnetization direction of the magnetic layer to a direction opposite the spin polarization direction of the conduction electron acts on magnetization. STT is a phenomenon in which the direction of magnetization is varied by directly interacting with a current other than a magnetic field. Accordingly, this enables the direction of magnetization to be varied by applying only a current without requiring a magnetic field, thereby being used as memory, a sensor, an oscillator, and the like.
A spin transfer torque device using STT has a high variation in magnetic resistance above 100% in contrast to the fact that variations in the magnetic resistance of GMR and TMR devices are 10% and 50%, respectively, and thus the sensitivity of the spin transfer torque device is very high. Accordingly, a higher signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) can be obtained in magnetic field detection application bands around 100 Gauss. However, in spite of such higher sensitivity, the spin transfer torque device using STT is problematic in that a measurement range (a dynamic range) is very narrow (about 1 Gauss) and in that there is the dispersion of a switching magnetic field in connection with a manufacturing process and thermal stability. Furthermore, a coercive field Hc attributable to the hysteresis of a ferromagnetic layer is present, and thus linearity is limited. In order to mitigate the hysteresis characteristic of the magnetoresistance sensor so that it meets that of a linear magnetic sensor, an improvement in the characteristic of the material itself or an additional circuitry function for compensating for a hysteresis characteristic is required.
With regard to a conventional technology for controlling the coercive field and dynamic range of a magnetoresistance sensor, Korean Patent No. 0820079 discloses a technology for mitigating the hysteresis characteristic of a spin device by applying an AC or DC control magnetic field to the outside of a spin device through an exciting wire. Since the magnetic field is applied from the outside, the magnetoresistance sensor requires the additional exciting wire and magnetic field control, and thus the structure thereof becomes complicated. Furthermore, the consumption of driving power required to eliminate a coercive field is high, thus resulting in the radiation of heat.
The present invention is intended to provide a magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device to which technology for applying bipolar pulses and an offset bias to a spin transfer torque device in order to compensate for the hysteresis characteristic of the magnetic sensor, thereby eliminating the coercive field of the magnetic sensor, improving sensitivity, and also controlling a dynamic range and the offset of the dynamic range.
In order to solve the above technical problem, the present invention provides a magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device, including a spin transfer torque device configured such that the magnetization direction thereof is varied by applied direct current (DC) power; a bipolar pulse source configured to apply bipolar pulses to the spin transfer torque device in order to control the coercive field and sensitivity of the spin transfer torque device; and a signal processing unit configured to calculate magnetic susceptibility or magnetic resistance by counting the P or AP states of the spin transfer torque device in response to the applied bipolar pulses.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the signal processing unit includes a counter configured to count the P or AP states of the spin transfer torque device; and a computation unit configured to perform computation on values counted by the counter.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a low frequency band-pass filter configured to eliminate high frequency components attributable to the bipolar pulses is added upstream of the signal processing unit.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the magnetic sensor further includes a bias unit configured to apply an offset bias to the spin transfer torque device in order to control the location of the dynamic range of the spin transfer torque device.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the magnetic sensor further includes a resistor unit of a resistance characteristic connected in series to the spin transfer torque device, and the output level of the magnetic sensor is adjusted by controlling the resistance value of the resistor unit.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a second spin transfer torque device is connected in series instead of the resistor unit, and then the output level of the magnetic sensor is adjusted.
In another embodiment of the present invention, there is a spin transfer torque-type magnetic sensor integrated circuit chip, including a spin transfer torque device configured such that the magnetization direction thereof is varied by applied DC power; an offset control unit configured to control the offset of the output of the spin transfer torque device; and electrode pads configured to receive and output signals from and to the spin transfer torque device; and the spin transfer torque device, the offset control unit, and the electrode pads are integrated into a single substrate.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the spin transfer torque-type magnetic sensor integrated circuit chip of claim further includes a coercive field/dynamic range control unit configured to control the coercive field and sensitivity of the spin transfer torque device; and a signal processing unit configured to calculate magnetic susceptibility or magnetic resistance by counting the P or AP states of the spin transfer torque device in response to the applied bipolar pulses.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the spin transfer torque-type magnetic sensor integrated circuit chip further includes an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) configured to convert the analog signals of the sensor into digital signals.
The advantages of the present invention are as follows:
First, the coercive field of a magnetic resistance device can be controlled and also hysteresis can be eliminated by controlling the amplitude of a high-frequency current waveform.
Second, the polarity and strength of even a weak magnetic field of several oersteds emitted from a measurement target can be determined because there is no hysteresis.
Third, a dynamic range may be freely shifted by controlling an offset bias or additionally applying an external magnetic field.
Fourth, the magnetic sensor of the present invention is connected in series to an active variable resistor or a spin transfer torque device using a resistor or a transistor, and then an output voltage region can be controlled.
Fifth, a magnetic field dynamic range can be extended and searched because a tens-of-oersted region can be scanned using a sweep method that varies an offset bias.
Sixth, the magnetic sensor of the present invention can be used in a variety of fields, such as the detection of nanoparticles, nondestructive tests, metallic detection, geomagnetic detection, etc. because a tens-of-oersted wide region can be finely divided at a resolution equal to or lower than one oersted using the fifth advantage.
Seventh, the commercial market in a corresponding field can be shared because the magnetic sensor of the present invention can compare with conventional magnetic field detection devices, such as fluxgates and Hall sensors thanks to the sixth advantage, and the magnetic sensor of the present invention can be applied to micro-devices (micro-machines) because it can be fabricated in a size smaller than those of the above devices.
Eighth, an exciting wire may be additionally provided. In this case, the phase of a current wave input to the exciting wire is made different from the phase output from the magnetic sensor by varying the magnitude of a coercive field, and thus the magnetic sensor may be used as a phase modulation device. That is, when a coercive field is weak, output resistance attributable to input current waves input to the exciting wire immediately varies, and thus a phase delay is small. In contrast, when the coercive field is strong, a delay is increased by the time it takes for the amplitude of the current waves to increase to a value that is sufficient to enable magnetization switching and thus an electric signal is output from the magnetic sensor.
A magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device according to the present invention includes a spin transfer torque device configured such that the magnetization direction thereof is varied by applying a current, a bipolar pulse source configured to apply bipolar pulses to the spin transfer torque device in order to control the coercive field and sensitivity of the spin transfer torque device, and a signal processing unit configured to calculate magnetic susceptibility or magnetic resistance by counting the P or AP states of the spin transfer torque device in response to the applied bipolar pulses.
Details that are used to practice the present invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. Since the illustrated drawings illustrate only essential principal elements and omit auxiliary elements for the purpose of clarity of the present invention, the present invention should not be interpreted only based on the drawings.
A spin transfer torque device that is used in the present invention uses a magnetic multilayer film structure generally composed of a “magnetic layer/a nonmagnetic layer/a magnetic layer.” The magnetic layer is made of a ferromagnetic material in which the spin of electrons and magnetic moment attributable to orbital angular momentum influence each other. In the case of a ferromagnetic material, magnetization increases and then a magnetic saturation state is reached when a magnetic field is increased, remanent magnetization occurs without a magnetic field when the magnetic field is decreased, and the same phenomenon occurs in the opposite direction when a magnetic field is applied in the opposite direction, thereby causing a magnetization curve to assume a closed hysteresis loop. Accordingly, magnetization nonlinearly occurs in response to an applied magnetic field, and remanent magnetization is generated by spontaneous magnetization. A magnetic field in the opposite direction that is required to eliminate such remanent magnetization is referred to as a coercive field (Hc).
In conventional technology, a coercive field is cancelled out by applying a magnetic field from the outside in order to control the coercive field and dynamic range of a magnetic sensor. In contrast, the present invention proposes technology that can control a coercive field and sensitivity in such a way as to apply bipolar pulses directly to a spin transfer torque device using the STT phenomenon and that can shift a dynamic range in such a way as to apply an offset bias thereto.
In addition, the present invention proposes technology that can control sensitivity in such a way as to apply a bipolar pulse having amplitude higher than that of a minimum voltage or current (critical voltage or current) that enables magnetization switching to be achieved using only a voltage or a current.
In a spin transfer torque device, magnetic switching is generated by using only a magnetic field without requiring a bias current or voltage, as in a conventional spin device. Another characteristic of a spin transfer torque device is that magnetic switching is generated by using only a current or voltage passing through the spin transfer torque device without requiring a magnetic field. Accordingly, a spin transfer torque device has one additional variable related to the generation of magnetic switching compared to a conventional spin device.
The magnetic susceptibility attributable to bipolar pulses applied to the spin transfer torque device may be replaced with magnetic resistance, the relationship of which is illustrated in
If the coercive field is cancelled out by applying bipolar pulses to a spin transfer torque device, the shift between the P state and the AP state is rapidly performed. Accordingly, the problem occurs that the magnetic resistance becomes highly sensitive because the shift region between the low resistance state RL and the high resistance state RH is narrow, and thus only magnetic fields in a limited and narrow range are detected.
It can be seen that if an AC magnetic field is applied while the sign of the magnetic field or current (or voltage) is changing over time at very high speed, the result can be obtained (
A method of shifting a dynamic range sensitive to a magnetic field in the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device is to apply an additionally offset bias (a DC magnetic field or voltage (current)) while applying bipolar pulses.
A method of controlling a coercive field according to the present invention is illustrated in
The bipolar pulse source 1 applies pulses having a positive/negative amplitude directly to the spin transfer torque device 2 in order to cancel out the coercive field of the spin transfer torque device 2, and alternately applies positive/negative pulses. In this case, the shorter the period of the pulses is, the more desirable it is for the linearization of the magnetic sensor. The waveform of the bipolar pulse source 1 may correspond to bipolar sine waves or triangular waves apart from bipolar square waves illustrated in
Although the spin transfer torque device 2 generally has a multilayer film structure composed of a fixed magnetic layer/a nonmagnetic layer/a free magnetic layer, the spin transfer torque device 2 is not limited thereto, but may be composed of a single magnetic layer. The spin transfer torque device 2 may be implemented as a nanocontact or a nanopillar. If necessary, the spin transfer torque device 2 may be implemented as an array in which unit spin transfer torque devices are connected in series or by a magnetic sensor.
The signal processing unit 22 calculates magnetic susceptibility or the number of times that magnetic resistance has been saturated by counting the parallel or AP states of the spin transfer torque device 2 based on applied bipolar pulses. The signal processing unit 22 may include the counter 3 and the computation unit 4.
The counter 3 counts the number of times per unit time that the spin transfer torque device 2 is in the AP state and in the P state when bipolar pulses are applied. The magnetic resistance of the spin transfer torque device 2 decreases until the magnetization direction of the fixed magnetic layer and the magnetization direction of the free magnetic layer have entered a P state. In contrast, when the magnetization direction of the free magnetic layer and the magnetization direction of the fixed magnetic layer have entered an AP state, the magnetic resistance value of the spin transfer torque device 2 increases.
The computation unit 4 calculates the average value using the dwell time of each pulse, a pulse period τc, and the numbers m and n of P and AP states that have been counted by the counter 3, as expressed by the following Equation 1:
nτ
p
+mτ
ap=(n+m)τc (1)
where τp and τap are the dwell time in the P state and the dwell time in the AP state, respectively.
The numbers of AP states and P states are counted by circuits, such as flip-flops, inside the counter 3. To eliminate bipolar pulses, such as high frequency components, a low frequency band-pass filter may be installed upstream of the counter 4.
In embodiment 1, excessive pulses higher than the critical voltage (current) may be applied to control sensitivity, and a resistor network or an attenuator may be added to control the resistance variation rate.
A method of controlling a dynamic range offset according to the present invention is illustrated in
In this embodiment 2, to control sensitivity, excessive pulses, equivalent to or above the critical current (voltage) or magnetic field, that enable magnetization may be applied, and a resistor network or an attenuator may be added to thereby adjust a variation rate in resistance.
A method of controlling an output level according to the present invention is illustrated in
The coercive field/dynamic range control unit 11 outputs control signals ctrl1 and ctrl2 operable to control the bipolar pulse source 1 and the bias unit 6 to the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device 10. The offset control unit 12 controls the offset of the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device 10. The analog digital converter 13 converts the analog output signals of the magnetic sensor 10 into digital signals. Magnetic field information may be selectively output in a digital or analog form.
A disposable magnetic sensor 19 is connected to a mobile communication terminal 21 through the port 20 of the mobile communication terminal, and information detected by the disposable magnetic sensor 19 is read through the mobile communication terminal 21. For example, the disposable magnetic sensor 19 may be a sensor that detects information about the DNA of the human body that adheres to nanoparticles. The nanoparticle is a magnetic nanoparticle that can be magnetized, and, if a DNA probe is attached to the disposable magnetic sensor 19, the nanoparticles reach and adhere to the disposable magnetic sensor 19. In this case, it may be possible for the disposable magnetic sensor 19 to sensitively respond to a magnetic field generated around the nanoparticles and to count the number of nanoparticles to which a desired DNA adheres.
Furthermore, the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device of the present invention is easy to be applied to nondestructive test sensors for detecting micro-cracks, medical nanoparticle sensors and future micro-robot applications. In particular, the manufacturing cost of the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device of the present invention is low, and is thus easily used for the development of diagnostic kits. The magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device of the present invention can be applied to electronic compasses for mobile devices because it has a very small size and can ensure a high sensitivity characteristic, thereby providing a possibility for high marketability.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to embodiments, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations may be made to the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention that have been described in the following claims.
The magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device according to the present invention may be applied to nondestructive test sensors for detecting micro-cracks, medical nanoparticle sensors, gear tooth sensors for small-sized high-precision machinery parts, and future micro-robot applications.
Furthermore, the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device is easy to be used for the development of transparent sensors because it has a very small size.
In particular, the magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device according to the present invention is easily used for the development of disposable diagnostic kits because it has a low manufacturing cost. The magnetic sensor using a spin transfer torque device of the present invention can be applied to electronic compasses for mobile devices because it has a very small size and can ensure a high sensitivity characteristic, thereby providing a possibility for high marketability.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/KR2012/009720 | 11/16/2012 | WO | 00 | 8/22/2013 |