UCLA researchers capture wasted heat, use it to power devices
FINDINGS:
Imagine how much you could save on your electricity bill if you could use the excess heat your computer generates to actually power the machine.
(more…)
FINDINGS:
Imagine how much you could save on your electricity bill if you could use the excess heat your computer generates to actually power the machine.
(more…)
Berkeley Lab Researchers Take a Mesocale Look at Magnetic Vortex Formations
The phenomenon in ferromagnetic nanodisks of magnetic vortices – hurricanes of magnetism only a few atoms across – has generated intense interest in the high-tech community because of the potential application of these vortices in non-volatile Random Access Memory (RAM) data storage systems. New findings from scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) indicate that the road to magnetic vortex RAM might be more difficult to navigate than previously supposed, but there might be unexpected rewards as well.
In an experiment made possible by the unique X-ray beams at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS), a team of researchers led by Peter Fischer and Mi-Young Im of the Center for X-Ray Optics (CXRO), in collaboration with scientists in Japan, discovered that contrary to what was previously believed, the formation of magnetic vortices in ferromagnetic nanodisks is an asymmetric phenomenon. It is possible that this breaking of symmetry would lead to failure in a data storage device during its initialization process. (more…)