New method guides magnetism without magnets: Study

ANI June 18, 2025 367 views

Researchers at PSI have demonstrated a groundbreaking method to control magnetism using electric fields instead of traditional magnets. The study focused on copper oxyselenide, a magnetoelectric material where atomic spins form tunable magnetic textures. By applying different electric field strengths, scientists observed three distinct responses including dramatic 90-degree flips in magnetic orientation. This discovery could lead to ultra-efficient computing and medical technologies while reducing energy consumption in data centers.

"The ability to steer such large magnetic textures with electric fields shows what's possible when creative experiments are paired with world-class research infrastructures." – Jonathan White, PSI
Washington DC, June 18: Researchers at Paul Scherrer Institute PSI have demonstrated an innovative method to control magnetism in materials using an energy-efficient electric field.

Key Points

1

Magnetoelectric materials link electric and magnetic properties

2

Copper oxyselenide allows voltage-controlled magnetic reorientation

3

Three distinct responses observed at varying field strengths

4

Breakthrough could revolutionize energy-efficient computing

The discovery focuses on materials known as magnetoelectrics, which offer promise for next-generation energy technologies, data storage, energy conversion, and medical devices.

The findings are published in the journal Nature Communications.

With AI and data centres demanding more and more energy, scientists are searching for smarter, greener technologies.

That's where magnetoelectric materials come in -- special compounds where electric and magnetic properties are linked.

This connection lets researchers control magnetism using electric fields, which could pave the way for super-energy-efficient memory and computing devices.

One such magnetoelectric material is the olive-green crystalcopper oxyselenide(Cu2OSeO3). At low temperatures, the atomic spins arrange themselves into exotic magnetic textures, forming structures such as helices and cones.

These patterns are much larger than the underlying atomic lattice and not fixed to its geometry, making them highly tuneable.

Now, scientists at PSI have demonstrated that an electric field can steer these magnetic textures inside copper oxyselenide.

In typical materials, magnetic structures - formed from the twisting and alignment of atomic spins -- are locked in specific orientations.

In copper oxyselenide with the right voltage, the researchers could nudge and reorient them.

This is the first time that the propagation direction of a magnetic texture could be continuously reorientated in a material using an electric field - an effect known as magnetoelectric deflection.

To investigate the magnetic structures, the team used the SANS-I beamline at the Swiss Spallation Neutron Source SINQ, a facility that uses beams of neutrons to map the arrangement and orientation of magnetic structures within a solid at the nanoscale.

A custom-designed sample environment enabled the researchers to apply a high electric field whilst simultaneously probing the magnetisation inside the crystal with small-angle neutron scattering (SANS).

"The ability to steer such large magnetic textures with electric fields shows what's possible when creative experiments are paired with world-class research infrastructures," says Jonathan White, beamline scientist at PSI.

"The reason we can capture such a subtle effect as magnetoelectric deflection is due to the exceptional resolution and versatility of SANS-I," added Jonathan White.

The newly discovered magnetoelectric deflection response prompted a deeper investigation into its underlying physics. What they found was intriguing: the magnetic structures didn't just respond -- they behaved in three distinct ways depending on the strength of the electric field.

Low electric fields gently deflected the magnetic structures with a linear response. Medium fields brought in more complex, non-linear behaviour.

High fields caused dramatic 90-degree flips in the direction of propagation of the magnetic texture.

Reader Comments

A
Arjun P.
This is groundbreaking research! If this technology can reduce energy consumption in data centers by even 20%, it would be a game-changer for India's digital infrastructure. Our IT sector could benefit massively from such innovations. Hope IISc and TIFR are working on similar projects!
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Priya K.
Fascinating read! 🤯 But I wonder - how long before this becomes commercially viable? Indian startups should keep an eye on this space. The medical device applications could be particularly useful for our public healthcare system if the costs are manageable.
R
Rahul S.
While this is impressive, I'm concerned about the "low temperatures" requirement mentioned. India's tropical climate might pose challenges for practical implementation. Would love to see research on similar materials that work at room temperature.
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Neha M.
As an engineering student, this makes me so excited! 🇮🇳 We need more investment in fundamental research like this in India. Our scientists are brilliant but often lack proper infrastructure. Hope the new National Research Foundation will support such cutting-edge work.
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Sanjay V.
The energy efficiency angle is crucial for India's climate commitments. But will this technology remain accessible only to rich nations? We must ensure developing countries aren't left behind in the next tech revolution. International cooperation is key.
K
Kavita R.
Interesting research, but the article could explain better how this differs from existing magnetoelectric materials. Also curious about the environmental impact of manufacturing these crystals. Every new tech should consider sustainability from day one. 🌱

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