nB nanoScale Biomagnetics

nB nanoScale Biomagnetics es una empresa de base tecnológica dedicada al diseño y producción de instrumentación científica y biomédica.

 

nB es un proyecto iniciado desde su origen en el espíritu del I+D+i, situándose en la frontera entre la investigación básica y la implementación industrial.

Formada en 2008 como Empresa Spin Off de la Universidad de Zaragoza ©, nB introduce en 2010 sus aplicadores de campo y accesorios para experimentos de calentamiento inductivo de materiales nanoestructurados, cuya mayor aplicación se encuentra en el campo de la hipertermia magnética.

La Serie DM100 surge como respuesta a las necesidades reales del equipo de investigación en hipertermia magnética del Instituto de Nanociencia de Aragón (INA). Su concepción y diseño cuenta con la colaboración de expertos investigadores en hipertermia magnética.

Página web de nB nanoScale Biomagnetics: http://www.nbnanoscale.com/

Control of single-spin magnetic anisotropy by exchange coupling

Jenny C. Oberg, M. Reyes Calvo, Fernando Delgado, María Moro-Lagares, David Serrate, David Jacob, Joaquín Fernández-Rossier & Cyrus F. Hirjibehedin

Nature Nanotechnology(2013)

doi:10.1038/nnano.2013.264
Received 21 May 2013. Accepted 08 November 2013. Published online 08 December 2013

 

http://www.nature.com/nnano/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nnano.2013.264.html

 

The properties of quantum systems interacting with their environment, commonly called open quantum systems, can be affected strongly by this interaction. Although this can lead to unwanted consequences, such as causing decoherence in qubits used for quantum computation1, it can also be exploited as a probe of the environment. For example, magnetic resonance imaging is based on the dependence of the spin relaxation times of protons2 in water molecules in a host’s tissue3. Here we show that the excitation energy of a single spin, which is determined by magnetocrystalline anisotropy and controls its stability and suitability for use in magnetic data-storage devices4, can be modified by varying the exchange coupling of the spin to a nearby conductive electrode. Using scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy, we observe variations up to a factor of two of the spin excitation energies of individual atoms as the strength of the spin’s coupling to the surrounding electronic bath changes. These observations, combined with calculations, show that exchange coupling can strongly modify the magnetic anisotropy. This system is thus one of the few open quantum systems in which the energy levels, and not just the excited-state lifetimes, can be renormalized controllably. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, a property normally determined by the local structure around a spin, can be tuned electronically. These effects may play a significant role in the development of spintronic devices5 in which an individual magnetic atom or molecule is coupled to conducting leads.