Intelligent Data Centres Issue 04 | Page 29

EDITOR’S QUESTION WHAT ARE THE BIGGEST DATA STORAGE CHALLENGES CURRENTLY FACING BUSINESSES AND ORGANISATIONS? cientists at the Universities of Birmingham, Bristol and Colorado Boulder have moved a step closer to developing the next generation of data storage and processing devices, using an emerging science called skyrmionics. S “The challenge of improving our data storage is becoming increasingly urgent,” explains Mark Dennis, Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Birmingham and lead author of the study. Skyrmionics focuses on harnessing the properties of nanometer-sized structures in magnetic films called skyrmions. These spin on the surface of the magnet like tiny vortices and scientists believe they could be used to store much denser quantities of data than is currently possible using existing magnetic data storage techniques on which modern computers currently rely. “We will need new technological approaches to increase the amount of data we want to store in our computers, phones and other devices, and skyrmion bags might be a route to this. Rather than using trains of single skyrmions to encode binary bits, each skyrmion bag can hold any number of skyrmions, massively increasing the potential for data storage.” The shape of these skyrmion structures means data encoded in them could also be transferred using much less power than is currently achievable. The team has modelled its technique in magnetic devices using computer simulations and successfully tested it in experiments involving liquid crystals. But arranging these new structures in a way that makes them capable of storing and transferring data has proved a challenge. Skyrmions were originally proposed as a theoretical model of fundamental particles by Professor Tony Skyrme of the University of Birmingham in the 1960s. This research, funded by the Leverhulme Trust and the US Department of Energy, demonstrates how purely theoretical ideas in physics can lead to innovative new technologies. In a new study, published in Nature Physics, the research team of UK-based theorists and US-based experimentalists has demonstrated a way of combining www.intelligentdatacentres.com multiple skyrmions together in structures they call ‘skyrmion bags’, which allows a far greater packing of information in skyrmion systems. Issue 04 29