Peter will be working in the Ferroelectronics Lab over the summer as part of the Summer Undergraduate Research in Engineering Program (SURE). SURE offers summer research internships to outstanding undergraduate students who have completed their sophomore or junior year. The progam funds the undergraduate student for 10-12 weeks of full-time research. Peter will be working to synthesize ordered antiferromagnetic Tb2Ir2O7 thin films for use in magnetotransport studies.
Congratulations to Steve and Nguyen for their Rackham Graduate Student Research grants.
Steve and Nguyen both received Rackham Graduate Student Research grants for $3,000 each. Steve’s grant will go towards buying a new magnetron sputtering assembly for the lab and Nguyen’s grant was for the purchase of a high voltage amplifier unit for electronic measurements. Congratulations to both of them.
Steve gives a talk at APS March Meeting
This past week, Steve gave a contributed talk on theoretical calculations of strain dependent spin orbit splitting in PtMn3 and its effect on intrinsic transport properties.
Abstract: Efficient charge-to-spin current conversion in materials is crucial to the development of spintronic memory or logic devices. A promising and established method of spin current generation is the injection of charge current through a crystal with a strong intrinsic spin Hall conductivity. Recently, a class of antiferromagnets with the composition XMn3, where X={Pt, Ir, Rh}, have been identified as materials with large intrinsic spin Hall conductivities stemming from their non-trivial spin order. The exact role of antiferromagnetic spin texture on the generated spin current, however, is not fully understood. Temperature-dependent triangular AFM – collinear AFM phase transitions in chemically ordered PtMn3 can be exploited to probe this directly. Here, we report on the growth and magneto-transport measurement of ordered PtMn3 thin films. Harmonic transport measurement techniques utilizing spin-transfer torques were performed to determine the spin and anomalous Hall conductivities at select temperatures.
Peter’s artwork chosen to hang in the MSE department
Peter gives a talk at the UM college of engineering graduate student coffee hour
Peter gave an invited talk at the recent college of engineering graduate student coffee hour on the novel and distortion dependent magnetic properties of entropy-stabilized oxides. Every two weeks, the graduate student council gives two graduate students the opportunity to give talks at this cross-department meeting.
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