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Non-volatile electric control of spin-charge conversion in a SrTiO3 Rashba system 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7804) : 483-+
作者:  Collombet, Samuel;  Ranisavljevic, Noemie;  Nagano, Takashi;  Varnai, Csilla;  Shisode, Tarak;  Leung, Wing;  Piolot, Tristan;  Galupa, Rafael;  Borensztein, Maud;  Servant, Nicolas;  Fraser, Peter;  Ancelin, Katia;  Heard, Edith
收藏  |  浏览/下载:14/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

The polarization direction of a ferroelectric-like state can be used to control the conversion of spin currents into charge currents at the surface of strontium titanate, a non-magnetic oxide.


After 50 years of development, the technology of today'  s electronics is approaching its physical limits, with feature sizes smaller than 10 nanometres. It is also becoming clear that the ever-increasing power consumption of information and communication systems(1) needs to be contained. These two factors require the introduction of non-traditional materials and state variables. As recently highlighted(2), the remanence associated with collective switching in ferroic systems is an appealing way to reduce power consumption. A promising approach is spintronics, which relies on ferromagnets to provide non-volatility and to generate and detect spin currents(3). However, magnetization reversal by spin transfer torques(4) is a power-consuming process. This is driving research on multiferroics to achieve low-power electric-field control of magnetization(5), but practical materials are scarce and magnetoelectric switching remains difficult to control. Here we demonstrate an alternative strategy to achieve low-power spin detection, in a non-magnetic system. We harness the electric-field-induced ferroelectric-like state of strontium titanate (SrTiO3)(6-9) to manipulate the spin-orbit properties(10) of a two-dimensional electron gas(11), and efficiently convert spin currents into positive or negative charge currents, depending on the polarization direction. This non-volatile effect opens the way to the electric-field control of spin currents and to ultralow-power spintronics, in which non-volatility would be provided by ferroelectricity rather than by ferromagnetism.


  
Global chemical effects of the microbiome include new bile-acid conjugations 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 579 (7797) : 123-+
作者:  Dossin, Francois;  Pinheiro, Ines;  Zylicz, Jan J.;  Roensch, Julia;  Collombet, Samuel;  Le Saux, Agnes;  Chelmicki, Tomasz;  Attia, Mikael;  Kapoor, Varun;  Zhan, Ye;  Dingli, Florent;  Loew, Damarys;  Mercher, Thomas;  Dekker, Job;  Heard, Edith
收藏  |  浏览/下载:31/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Metabolomics data from germ-free and specific-pathogen-free mice reveal effects of the microbiome on host chemistry, identifying conjugations of bile acids that are also enriched in patients with inflammatory bowel disease or cystic fibrosis.


A mosaic of cross-phylum chemical interactions occurs between all metazoans and their microbiomes. A number of molecular families that are known to be produced by the microbiome have a marked effect on the balance between health and disease(1-9). Considering the diversity of the human microbiome (which numbers over 40,000 operational taxonomic units(10)), the effect of the microbiome on the chemistry of an entire animal remains underexplored. Here we use mass spectrometry informatics and data visualization approaches(11-13) to provide an assessment of the effects of the microbiome on the chemistry of an entire mammal by comparing metabolomics data from germ-free and specific-pathogen-free mice. We found that the microbiota affects the chemistry of all organs. This included the amino acid conjugations of host bile acids that were used to produce phenylalanocholic acid, tyrosocholic acid and leucocholic acid, which have not previously been characterized despite extensive research on bile-acid chemistry(14). These bile-acid conjugates were also found in humans, and were enriched in patients with inflammatory bowel disease or cystic fibrosis. These compounds agonized the farnesoid X receptor in vitro, and mice gavaged with the compounds showed reduced expression of bile-acid synthesis genes in vivo. Further studies are required to confirm whether these compounds have a physiological role in the host, and whether they contribute to gut diseases that are associated with microbiome dysbiosis.