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Albert Fert

Researcher at Université Paris-Saclay

Publications -  431
Citations -  53132

Albert Fert is an academic researcher from Université Paris-Saclay. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetoresistance & Spintronics. The author has an hindex of 95, co-authored 410 publications receiving 46732 citations. Previous affiliations of Albert Fert include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & University of Paris-Sud.

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Giant magnetoresistance of (001)Fe/(001)Cr magnetic superlattices.

TL;DR: This work ascribes this giant magnetoresistance of (001)Fe/(001)Cr superlattices prepared by molecularbeam epitaxy to spin-dependent transmission of the conduction electrons between Fe layers through Cr layers.
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Skyrmions on the track

TL;DR: Magnetic skyrmions are nanoscale spin configurations that hold promise as information carriers in ultradense memory and logic devices owing to the extremely low spin-polarized currents needed to move them.
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Science and technology roadmap for graphene, related two-dimensional crystals, and hybrid systems

Andrea C. Ferrari, +68 more
- 04 Mar 2015 - 
TL;DR: An overview of the key aspects of graphene and related materials, ranging from fundamental research challenges to a variety of applications in a large number of sectors, highlighting the steps necessary to take GRMs from a state of raw potential to a point where they might revolutionize multiple industries are provided.
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The emergence of spin electronics in data storage

TL;DR: The authors are starting to see a new paradigm where magnetization dynamics and charge currents act on each other in nanostructured artificial materials, allowing faster, low-energy operations: spin electronics is on its way.
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Nucleation, stability and current-induced motion of isolated magnetic skyrmions in nanostructures

TL;DR: It is demonstrated by numerical investigations that an isolated skyrmion can be a stable configuration in a nanostructure, can be locally nucleated by injection of spin-polarized current, and can be displaced by current-induced spin torques, even in the presence of large defects.