456 research outputs found
Impurity induced enhancement of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in Fe/MgO tunnel junctions
Using first-principles calculations, we investigated the impact of chromium
(Cr) and vanadium (V) impurities on the magnetic anisotropy and spin
polarization in Fe/MgO magnetic tunnel junctions. It is demonstrated using
layer resolved anisotropy calculation technique, that while the impurity near
the interface has a drastic effect in decreasing the perpendicular magnetic
anisotropy (PMA), its position within the bulk allows maintaining high surface
PMA. Moreover, the effective magnetic anisotropy has a strong tendency to go
from in-plane to out-of-plane character as a function of Cr and V concentration
favoring out-of-plane magnetization direction for ~1.5 nm thick Fe layers at
impurity concentrations above 20 %. At the same time, spin polarization is not
affected and even enhanced in most situations favoring an increase of tunnel
magnetoresistance (TMR) values.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Artificial ferroelectricity due to anomalous Hall effect in magnetic tunnel junctions
We theoretically investigated Anomalous Hall Effect (AHE) and Spin Hall
Effect (SHE) transversally to the insulating spacer O, in magnetic tunnel
junctions of the form F/O/F where F are ferromagnetic layers and O represents a
tunnel barrier. We considered the case of purely ballistic (quantum mechanical)
transport, taking into account the assymetric scattering due to spin-orbit
interaction in the tunnel barrier. AHE and SHE in the considered case have a
surface nature due to proximity effect. Their amplitude is in first order of
the scattering potential. This contrasts with ferromagnetic metals wherein
these effect are in second (side-jump scattering) and third (skew scattering)
order on these potentials. The value of AHE voltage in insulating spacer may be
much larger than in metallic ferromagnetic electrodes. For the antiparallel
orientation of the magnetizations in the two F-electrodes, a spontaneous Hall
voltage exists even at zero applied voltage. Therefore an insulating spacer
sandwiched between two ferromagnetic layers can be considered as exhibiting a
spontaneous ferroelectricity
Anatomy of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in Fe/MgO magnetic tunnel junctions: First principles insight
Using first-principles calculations, we elucidate microscopic mechanisms of
perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA)in Fe/MgO magnetic tunnel junctions
through evaluation of orbital and layer resolved contributions into the total
anisotropy value. It is demonstrated that the origin of the large PMA values is
far beyond simply considering the hybridization between Fe-3dd_{yz(xz)}d_{z^2}d_{xy}d_{x^2-y^2}^2$.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Current perpendicular to plane Giant Magnetoresistance (GMR) in laminated nanostructures
We theoretically studied spin dependent electron transport
perpendicular-to-plain (CPP) in magnetic laminated multilayered structures by
using Kubo formalism. We took into account not only bulk scattering, but the
interface resistance due to both specular and diffuse reflection and also spin
conserving and spin-flip processes. It was shown that spin-flip scattering at
interfaces substantially reduces the value of GMR. This can explain the
experimental observations that the CPP GMR ratio for laminated structures only
slightly increases as compared to non-laminated ones despite lamination induces
a significant increase in CPP resistance.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Spin-dependent diffraction at ferromagnetic/spin spiral interface
Spin-dependent transport is investigated in ballistic regime through the
interface between a ferromagnet and a spin spiral. We show that spin-dependent
interferences lead to a new type of diffraction called "spin-diffraction". It
is shown that this spin-diffraction leads to local spin and electrical currents
along the interface. This study also shows that in highly non homogeneous
magnetic configuration (non adiabatic limit), the contribution of the
diffracted electrons is crucial to describe spin transport in such structures
Respective influence of in-plane and out-of-plane spin-transfer torques in magnetization switching of perpendicular magnetic tunnel junctions
The relative contributions of in-plane (damping-like) and out-of-plane
(field-like) spin-transfer-torques in the magnetization switching of
out-of-plane magnetized magnetic tunnel junctions (pMTJ) has been theoretically
analyzed using the transformed Landau-Lifshitz (LL) equation with the STT
terms. It is demonstrated that in a pMTJ structure obeying macrospin dynamics,
the out-of-plane torque influences the precession frequency but it does not
contribute significantly to the STT switching process (in particular to the
switching time and switching current density), which is mostly determined by
the in-plane STT contribution. This conclusion is confirmed by finite
temperature and finite writing pulse macrospin simulations of the current-field
switching diagrams. It contrasts with the case of STT-switching in in-plane
magnetized MTJ in which the field-like term also influences the switching
critical current. This theoretical analysis was successfully applied to the
interpretation of voltage-field STT switching diagrams experimentally measured
on perpendicular MTJ pillars 36 nm in diameter, which exhibit macrospin-like
behavior. The physical nonequivalence of Landau and Gilbert dissipation terms
in presence of STT-induced dynamics is also discussed
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