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This thesis demonstrates that an ultralow temperature refrigeration
technique called "demagnetisation refrigeration" can be
miniaturised and incorporated onto millimeter-sized chips to cool
nanoelectronic circuits, devices and materials. Until recently, the
lowest temperature ever reached in such systems was around 4
millikelvin. Here, a temperature of 1.2mK is reported in a
nanoelectronic device. The thesis introduces the idea that on-chip
demagnetization refrigeration can be used to cool a wide variety of
nanostructures and devices to microkelvin temperatures. This brings
the exciting possibility of discovering new physics, such as exotic
electronic phases, in an unexplored regime and the potential to
improve the performance of existing applications, including
solid-state quantum technologies. Since the first demonstration of
on-chip demagnetization refrigeration, described here, the
technique has been taken up by other research groups around the
world. The lowest on-chip temperature is currently 0.4mK. Work is
now underway to adapt the technique to cool other materials and
devices, ultimately leading to a platform to study nanoscale
materials, devices and circuits at microkelvin temperatures.
This thesis demonstrates that an ultralow temperature refrigeration
technique called "demagnetisation refrigeration" can be
miniaturised and incorporated onto millimeter-sized chips to cool
nanoelectronic circuits, devices and materials. Until recently, the
lowest temperature ever reached in such systems was around 4
millikelvin. Here, a temperature of 1.2mK is reported in a
nanoelectronic device. The thesis introduces the idea that on-chip
demagnetization refrigeration can be used to cool a wide variety of
nanostructures and devices to microkelvin temperatures. This brings
the exciting possibility of discovering new physics, such as exotic
electronic phases, in an unexplored regime and the potential to
improve the performance of existing applications, including
solid-state quantum technologies. Since the first demonstration of
on-chip demagnetization refrigeration, described here, the
technique has been taken up by other research groups around the
world. The lowest on-chip temperature is currently 0.4mK. Work is
now underway to adapt the technique to cool other materials and
devices, ultimately leading to a platform to study nanoscale
materials, devices and circuits at microkelvin temperatures.
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Nadine Gordimer
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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