490 research outputs found
Effect of temperature-dependent shape anisotropy on coercivity with aligned Stoner-Wohlfarth soft ferromagnets
The temperature variation effect of shape anisotropy on the coercivity,
HC(T), for the aligned Stoner-Wohlfarth (SW) soft ferromagnets, such as fcc Ni,
fcc Co and bcc Fe, are investigated within the framework of Neel-Brown (N-B)
analysis. An extended N-B equation is thus proposed,by introducing a single
dimensionless correction function, the reduced magnetization, m(\tao) =
MS(T)/MS(0), in which \tao = T/TC is the reduced temperature, MS(T) is the
saturation magnetization, and TC is the Curie temperature. The factor, m(\tao),
accounts for the temperature-dependent effect of the shape anisotropy. The
constants, H0 and E0, are for the switching field at zero temperature and the
potential barrier at zero field, respectively. According to this newly derived
equation, the blocking temperature above which the properties of
superparamagnetism show up is described by the expression, TB =
E0m^2(\tao)/[kBln(t/t0)], with the extra correction factor m^2(\tao). The
possible effect on HC(T) and the blocking temperature, TB, attributed to the
downshift of TC resulting from the finite size effect has been discussed also.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, Accepted by Phys. Rev.
Spin-polarized electronic structures and transport properties of Fe-Co alloys
The electrical resistivities of Fe-Co alloys owing to random alloy disorder
are calculated using the Kubo-Greenwood formula. The obtained electrical
esistivities agree well with experimental data quantitatively at low
temperature. The spin-polarization of Fe50Co50 estimated from the conductivity
(86%) has opposite sign to that from the densities of the states at the Fermi
level (-73%). It is found that the conductivity is governed mainly by
s-electrons, and the s-electrons in the minority spin states are less
conductive due to strong scattering by the large densities of the states of
d-electrons than the majority spin electrons.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Elastic Instabilities within Antiferromagnetically Ordered Phase in the Orbitally-Frustrated Spinel GeCoO
Ultrasound velocity measurements of the orbitally-frustrated GeCoO
reveal unusual elastic instabilities due to the phonon-spin coupling within the
antiferromagnetic phase. Shear moduli exhibit anomalies arising from the
coupling to short-range ferromagnetic excitations. Diplike anomalies in the
magnetic-field dependence of elastic moduli reveal magnetic-field-induced
orbital order-order transitions. These results strongly suggest the presence of
geometrical orbital frustration which causes novel orbital phenomena within the
antiferromagnetic phase.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Synthesis and characterization of core-shell structure silica-coated Fe29.5Ni70.5 nanoparticles
In view of potential applications of magnetic particles in biomedicine and
electromagnetic devices, we made use of the classical Stober method
base-catalysed hydrolysis and condensation of tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) to
encapsulate FeNi nanoparticles within a silica shell. An original stirring
system under high power ultrasounds made possible to disperse the otherwise
agglomerated particles. Sonication guaranteed particles to remain dispersed
during the Stober synthesis and also improved the efficiency of the method. The
coated particles are characterized by electron microscopy (TEM) and
spectroscopy (EDX) showing a core-shell structure with a uniform layer of
silica. Silica-coating does not affect the core magnetic properties. Indeed,
all samples are ferromagnetic at 77 K and room temperature and the Curie point
remains unchanged. Only the coercive force shows an unexpected non-monotonous
dependence on silica layer thickness.Comment: Regular paper submited to international peer-reveiwed journa
Tuning the Curie temperature of FeCo compounds by tetragonal distortion
Combining density-functional theory calculations with a classical Monte Carlo
method, we show that for B2-type FeCo compounds tetragonal distortion gives
rise to a strong reduction of the Curie temperature . The
monotonically decreases from 1575 K (for ) to 940 K
(for c/a=\sqrtwo). We find that the nearest neighbor Fe-Co exchange
interaction is sufficient to explain the behavior of the
. Combination of high magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy with
a moderate value suggests tetragonal FeCo grown on the Rh
substrate with to be a promising material for heat-assisted magnetic
recording applications.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Magnetic dynamics with spin transfer torques near the Curie temperature
We use atomistic stochastic Landau-Lifshitz-Slonczewski simulations to study
the interaction between large thermal fluctuations and spin transfer torques in
the magnetic layers of spin valves. At temperatures near the Curie temperature
, spin currents measurably change the size of the magnetization
(i.e. there is a {\it longitudinal} spin transfer effect). The change in
magnetization of the free magnetic layer in a spin valve modifies the
temperature dependence of the applied field-applied current phase diagram for
temperatures near . These atomistic simulations can be accurately
described by a Landau-Lifshitz-Bloch + Slonczewski equation, which is a
thermally averaged mean field theory. Both the simulation and the mean field
theory show that a longitudinal spin transfer effect can be a substantial
fraction of the magnetization close to .Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Field-induced magnetic anisotropy in La0.7Sr0.3CoO3
Magnetic anisotropy has been measured for the ferromagnetic La0.7Sr0.3CoO3
perovskite from an analysis of the high-field part of the magnetization vs.
field curves, i.e., the magnetic saturation regime. These measurements give a
magnetic anistropy one order of magnitude higher than that of reference
manganites. Surprisingly, the values of the magnetic anisotropy calculated in
this way do not coincide with those estimated from measurements of coercive
fields which are one order of magnitude smaller. It is proposed that the reason
of this anomalous behaviour is a transition of the trivalent Co ions under the
external magnetic field from a low-spin to an intermediate-spin state. Such a
transition converts the Co3+ ions into Jahn-Teller ions having an only
partially quenched orbital angular momentum, which enhances the intra-atomic
spin-orbit coupling and magnetic anisotropy.Comment: Accepted of publication in Europhysics Letters, 11 pages, 5 figure
Quantized spin wave modes in magnetic tunnel junction nanopillars
We present an experimental and theoretical study of the magnetic field
dependence of the mode frequency of thermally excited spin waves in rectangular
shaped nanopillars of lateral sizes 60x100, 75x150, and 105x190 nm2, patterned
from MgO-based magnetic tunnel junctions. The spin wave frequencies were
measured using spectrally resolved electrical noise measurements. In all
spectra, several independent quantized spin wave modes have been observed and
could be identified as eigenexcitations of the free layer and of the synthetic
antiferromagnet of the junction. Using a theoretical approach based on the
diagonalization of the dynamical matrix of a system of three coupled, spatially
confined magnetic layers, we have modeled the spectra for the smallest pillar
and have extracted its material parameters. The magnetization and exchange
stiffness constant of the CoFeB free layer are thereby found to be
substantially reduced compared to the corresponding thin film values. Moreover,
we could infer that the pinning of the magnetization at the lateral boundaries
must be weak. Finally, the interlayer dipolar coupling between the free layer
and the synthetic antiferromagnet causes mode anticrossings with gap openings
up to 2 GHz. At low fields and in the larger pillars, there is clear evidence
for strong non-uniformities of the layer magnetizations. In particular, at zero
field the lowest mode is not the fundamental mode, but a mode most likely
localized near the layer edges.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, (re)submitted to PR
Dynamics of magnetization coupled to a thermal bath of elastic modes
We study the dynamics of magnetization coupled to a thermal bath of elastic
modes using a system plus reservoir approach with realistic magnetoelastic
coupling. After integrating out the elastic modes we obtain a self-contained
equation for the dynamics of the magnetization.
We find explicit expressions for the memory friction kernel and hence, {\em
via} the Fluctuation-Dissipation
Theorem, for the spectral density of the magnetization thermal fluctuations.
For magnetic samples in which the single domain approximation is valid, we
derive an equation for the dynamics of the uniform mode.
Finally we apply this equation to study the dynamics of the uniform
magnetization mode in insulating ferromagnetic thin films.
As experimental consequences we find that the fluctuation correlation time is
of the order of the ratio between the film thickness, , and the speed of
sound in the magnet and that the line-width of the ferromagnetic resonance peak
should scale as where is the magnetoelastic coupling constant.Comment: Revised version as appeared in print. 12 pages 9 figure
Equilibrium spin-glass transition of magnetic dipoles with random anisotropy axes
We study fully occupied lattice systems of classical magnetic dipoles which
point along random axes. Only dipolar interactions are considered. From
tempered Monte Carlo simulations, we obtain numerical evidence that supports
the following conclusions: in three dimensions, (a) there is an equilibrium
spin glass phase at temperatures below , where and is a nearest neighbor dipole-dipole
interaction energy, (b) in the spin glass phase the overlap parameter is
approximately given by , and (c) the correlation length
diverges at with a critical exponent ; in two dimensions
diverges at or near T=0 and .Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
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