Very nice feature interview of Julie on the website of Université Paris-Saclay ! On this topic, Julie says: “I am trying to share more of my true self, my emotions and core motivations for physics in interviews recently. I think it is important in order to promote diversity and novel avenues in research.”
Congratulations to Hanuman Singh for obtaining a senior research scientist position in VTT in Finland on quantum materials and sensors. We are happy for him, and sad that he is leaving, he did so much for the group. In less than 18 months, he obtained really beautiful results on novel synaptic devices. A few more steps to unlock and we will be able to share them with you!
We have used the properties of topologically protected magnetic particle-like structures called skyrmions to perform a fundamental operation of neuromorphic computing: the weighted summation of synaptic signals. These skyrmions, which act as analogs of neurotransmitters in a biological neural network, enabled the reproduction of this operation in a compact and energy-efficient manner, opening up new possibilities for neuromorphic components that approach the efficiency of biological systems. The recently published article is here: Nature Electronics 2025 [arXiv]
Figure: Weighted summation in a device composed of two parallel tracks (synapses) made of a magnetic multilayer. (a-d) Kerr microscopy images of the device, which consists of two parallel magnetic multilayer tracks, each 6 µm wide, connected by a transverse Ta Hall electrode, also 6 µm wide. After magnetization saturation of the track (a), skyrmions can be selectively nucleated in track 1 (b) and track 2 (c), before being erased by an inverse field or current (d). (e) Hall voltage ∆V (in red) and the corresponding sum of the detected skyrmion count in both tracks, ∑NSk, detec (in blue), during the successive injection of skyrmions into the tracks. 20 nucleation pulses are sequentially applied to each track (indicated by the green and yellow regions for tracks 1 and 2, respectively) using current pulses of approximately 116 GA/m² and 50 ns, at µ0Hz = 20 mT. The thin red curve represents the raw electrical measurements after drift correction, while the thick curve is the same after smoothing.