88 research outputs found
On the reorientation transition of ultra-thin Ni/Cu(001) films
The reorientation transition of the magnetization of ferromagnetic films is
studied on a microscopic basis within a Heisenberg spin model. Using a modified
mean field formulation it is possible to calculate properties of magnetic thin
films with non-integer thicknesses. This is especially important for the
reorientation transition in Ni/Cu(001), as there the magnetic properties are a
sensitive function of the film thickness. Detailed phase diagrams in the
thickness-temperature plane are calculated using experimental parameters and
are compared with experimental measurements by Baberschke and Farle (J. Appl.
Phys. 81, 5038 (1997)).Comment: 7 pages(LaTeX2e) with one figure(eps), accepted for publication in
JMMM. See also http://www.thp.Uni-Duisburg.DE/Publikationen/Publist_Us_R.htm
Anisotropy of ultra-thin ferromagnetic films and the spin reorientation transition
The influence of uniaxial anisotropy and the dipole interaction on the
direction of the magnetization of ultra-thin ferromagnetic films in the
ground-state is studied. The ground-state energy can be expressed in terms of
anisotropy constants which are calculated in detail as function of the system
parameters and the film thickness. In particular non-collinear spin
arrangements are taken into account. Conditions for the appearance of a spin
reorientation transition are given and analytic results for the width of the
canted phase and its shift in applied magnetic fields associated with this
transition are derived.Comment: 6 pages, RevTeX
Theory of the Spin Reorientation Transition of Ultra-Thin Ferromagnetic Films
The reorientation transition of the magnetization of ferromagnetic films is
studied on a microscopic basis within Heisenberg spin models. Analytic
expressions for the temperature dependent anisotropy are derived from which it
is seen that the reduced magnetization in the film surface at finite
temperatures plays a crucial role for this transition. Detailed phase diagrams
in the temperature-thickness plane are calculated.Comment: 6 pages(LaTeX2e), one figure(eps), accepted for publication in JMM
Reorientation transition of ultrathin ferromagnetic films
We demonstrate that the reorientation transition from out-of-plane to
in-plane magnetization with decreasing temperature as observed experimentally
in Ni-films on Cu(001) can be explained on a microscopic basis. Using a
combination of mean field theory and perturbation theory, we derive an analytic
expression for the temperature dependent anisotropy. The reduced magnetization
in the film surface at finite temperatures plays a crucial role for this
transition as with increasing temperature the influence of the uniaxial
anisotropies is reduced at the surface and is enhanced inside the film.Comment: 4 pages(RevTeX), 3 figures (EPS
Ferromagnetism and Temperature-Driven Reorientation Transition in Thin Itinerant-Electron Films
The temperature-driven reorientation transition which, up to now, has been
studied by use of Heisenberg-type models only, is investigated within an
itinerant-electron model. We consider the Hubbard model for a thin fcc(100)
film together with the dipole interaction and a layer-dependent anisotropy
field. The isotropic part of the model is treated by use of a generalization of
the spectral-density approach to the film geometry. The magnetic properties of
the film are investigated as a function of temperature and film thickness and
are analyzed in detail with help of the spin- and layer-dependent quasiparticle
density of states. By calculating the temperature dependence of the
second-order anisotropy constants we find that both types of reorientation
transitions, from out-of-plane to in-plane (``Fe-type'') and from in-plane to
out-of-plane (``Ni-type'') magnetization are possible within our model. In the
latter case the inclusion of a positive volume anisotropy is vital. The
reorientation transition is mediated by a strong reduction of the surface
magnetization with respect to the inner layers as a function of temperature and
is found to depend significantly on the total band occupation.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures included (eps), Phys Rev B in pres
Monte Carlo Simulation of Magnetization Reversal in Fe Sesquilayers on W(110)
Iron sesquilayers grown at room temperature on W(110) exhibit a pronounced
coercivity maximum near a coverage of 1.5 atomic monolayers. On lattices which
faithfully reproduce the morphology of the real films, a kinetic Ising model is
utilized to simulate the domain-wall motion. Simulations reveal that the
dynamics is dominated by the second-layer islands, which act as pinning
centers. The simulated dependencies of the coercivity on the film coverage, as
well as on the temperature and the frequency of the applied field, are very
similar to those measured in experiments. Unlike previous micromagnetic models,
the presented approach provides insight into the dynamics of the domain-wall
motion and clearly reveals the role of thermal fluctuations.Comment: Final version to appear in Phys. Rev. B. References to related works
added. 7 pages, 5 figures, RevTex, mpeg simulations available at
http://www.scri.fsu.edu/~rikvol
Quantum Monte Carlo simulation of thin magnetic films
The stochastic series expansion quantum Monte Carlo method is used to study
thin ferromagnetic films, described by a Heisenberg model including local
anisotropies. The magnetization curve is calculated, and the results compared
to Schwinger boson and many-body Green's function calculations. A transverse
field is introduced in order to study the reorientation effect, in which the
magnetization changes from out-of-plane to in-plane. Since the approximate
theoretical approaches above differ significantly from each other, and the
Monte Carlo method is free of systematic errors, the calculation provides an
unbiased check of the approximate treatments. By studying quantum spin models
with local anisotropies, varying spin size, and a transverse field, we also
demonstrate the general applicability of the recent cluster-loop formulation of
the stochastic series expansion quantum Monte Carlo method.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Magnetic Reversal on Vicinal Surfaces
We present a theoretical study of in-plane magnetization reversal for vicinal
ultrathin films using a one-dimensional micromagnetic model with
nearest-neighbor exchange, four-fold anisotropy at all sites, and two-fold
anisotropy at step edges. A detailed "phase diagram" is presented that catalogs
the possible shapes of hysteresis loops and reversal mechanisms as a function
of step anisotropy strength and vicinal terrace length. The steps generically
nucleate magnetization reversal and pin the motion of domain walls. No sharp
transition separates the cases of reversal by coherent rotation and reversal by
depinning of a ninety degree domain wall from the steps. Comparison to
experiment is made when appropriate.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Schwinger boson theory of anisotropic ferromagnetic ultrathin films
Ferromagnetic thin films with magnetic single-ion anisotropies are studied
within the framework of Schwinger bosonization of a quantum Heisenberg model.
Two alternative bosonizations are discussed. We show that qualitatively correct
results are obtained even at the mean-field level of the theory, similar to
Schwinger boson results for other magnetic systems. In particular, the
Mermin-Wagner theorem is satisfied: a spontaneous magnetization at finite
temperatures is not found if the ground state of the anisotropic system
exhibits a continuous degeneracy. We calculate the magnetization and effective
anisotropies as functions of exchange interaction, magnetic anisotropies,
external magnetic field, and temperature for arbitrary values of the spin
quantum number. Magnetic reorientation transitions and effective anisotropies
are discussed. The results obtained by Schwinger boson mean-field theory are
compared with the many-body Green's function technique.Comment: 14 pages, including 7 EPS figures, minor changes, final version as
publishe
- …