52 research outputs found
Unidirectional spin Hall magnetoresistance in ferromagnet/normal metal bilayers
Magnetoresistive effects are usually invariant upon inversion of the
magnetization direction. In noncentrosymmetric conductors, however, nonlinear
resistive terms can give rise to a current dependence that is quadratic in the
applied voltage and linear in the magnetization. Here we demonstrate that such
conditions are realized in simple bilayer metal films where the spin-orbit
interaction and spin-dependent scattering couple the current-induced spin
accumulation to the electrical conductivity. We show that the longitudinal
resistance of Ta|Co and Pt|Co bilayers changes when reversing the polarity of
the current or the sign of the magnetization. This unidirectional
magnetoresistance scales linearly with current density and has opposite sign in
Ta and Pt, which we associate with the modification of the interface scattering
potential induced by the spin Hall effect in these materials. Our results
suggest a route to control the resistance and detect magnetization switching in
spintronic devices using a two-terminal geometry, which applies also to
heterostructures including topological insulators
Origins of the unidirectional spin Hall magnetoresistance in metallic bilayers
Recent studies evidence the emergence of asymmetric electron transport in
layered conductors owing to the interplay between electrical conductivity,
magnetization, and the spin Hall or Rashba- Edelstein effects. Here, we
investigate the unidirectional magnetoresistance (UMR) caused by the
current-induced spin accumulation in Co/Pt and CoCr/Pt bilayers. We identify
three competing mechanisms underpinning the resistance asymmetry, namely
interface and bulk spin-dependent electron scattering and electron-magnon
scattering. Our measurements provide a consistent description of the current,
magnetic field, and temperature dependence of the UMR and show that both
positive and negative UMR can be obtained by tuning the interface and bulk
spin-dependent scattering terms relative to the magnon population
Ultrafast magnetization switching by spin-orbit torques
Spin-orbit torques induced by spin Hall and interfacial effects in heavy
metal/ferromagnetic bilayers allow for a switching geometry based on in-plane
current injection. Using this geometry, we demonstrate deterministic
magnetization reversal by current pulses ranging from 180~ps to ms in
Pt/Co/AlOx dots with lateral dimensions of 90~nm. We characterize the switching
probability and critical current as function of pulse length, amplitude,
and external field. Our data evidence two distinct regimes: a short-time
intrinsic regime, where scales linearly with the inverse of the pulse
length, and a long-time thermally assisted regime where varies weakly.
Both regimes are consistent with magnetization reversal proceeding by
nucleation and fast propagation of domains. We find that is a factor 3-4
smaller compared to a single domain model and that the incubation time is
negligibly small, which is a hallmark feature of spin-orbit torques
Symmetry and magnitude of spin-orbit torques in ferromagnetic heterostructures
Current-induced spin torques are of great interest to manipulate the
orientation of nanomagnets without applying external magnetic fields. They find
direct application in non-volatile data storage and logic devices, and provide
insight into fundamental processes related to the interdependence between
charge and spin transport. Recent demonstrations of magnetization switching
induced by in-plane current injection in ferromagnetic heterostructures have
drawn attention to a class of spin torques based on orbital-to-spin momentum
transfer, which is alternative to pure spin transfer torque (STT) between
noncollinear magnetic layers and amenable to more diversified device functions.
Due to the limited number of studies, however, there is still no consensus on
the symmetry, magnitude, and origin of spin-orbit torques (SOTs). Here we
report on the quantitative vector measurement of SOTs in Pt/Co/AlO trilayers
using harmonic analysis of the anomalous and planar Hall effects as a function
of the applied current and magnetization direction. We provide an all-purpose
scheme to measure the amplitude and direction of SOTs for any arbitrary
orientation of the magnetization, including corrections due to the interplay of
Hall and thermoelectric effects. Based on general space and time inversion
symmetry arguments, we show that asymmetric heterostructures allow for two
different SOTs having odd and even behavior with respect to magnetization
reversal. Our results reveal a scenario that goes beyond established models of
the Rashba and spin Hall contributions to SOTs. The even SOT is STT-like but
stronger than expected from the spin Hall effect in Pt. The odd SOT is composed
of a constant field-like term and an additional component, which is strongly
anisotropic and does not correspond to a simple Rashba field.Comment: Supplementary Informations follows Paper in the .pdf fil
Spin transport in as-grown and annealed thulium iron garnet/platinum bilayers with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy
We characterize the spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR), spin Seebeck effect (SSE), and dampinglike spin-orbit torque (SOT) in thulium iron garnet/platinum bilayers with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy by using harmonic Hall effect measurements. By consecutive annealing steps followed by measurements on a single device, we reveal that the spin-dependent effects gradually decrease in amplitude as the annealing temperature increases. We attribute this behavior primarily to the changes in the spin-mixing conductance, which sensitively depends on the interface quality. However, further analysis demonstrates that although the SSE scales closely with the SMR, the dampinglike SOT shows a significantly different trend upon annealing, contrary to theoretical expectations. By comparing the dampinglike SOT with the field-induced Hall effect, we found evidence that scattering from Fe impurities in the Pt at the interface might be responsible for the distinct annealing temperature dependence of the dampinglike SOT.Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftUnited States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (C-SPIN, a SRC STARnet Center)Microelectronics Advanced Research Corporation (MARCO) (C-SPIN, a SRC STARnet Center
Zero-Shot Motor Health Monitoring by Blind Domain Transition
Continuous long-term monitoring of motor health is crucial for the early
detection of abnormalities such as bearing faults (up to 51% of motor failures
are attributed to bearing faults). Despite numerous methodologies proposed for
bearing fault detection, most of them require normal (healthy) and abnormal
(faulty) data for training. Even with the recent deep learning (DL)
methodologies trained on the labeled data from the same machine, the
classification accuracy significantly deteriorates when one or few conditions
are altered. Furthermore, their performance suffers significantly or may
entirely fail when they are tested on another machine with entirely different
healthy and faulty signal patterns. To address this need, in this pilot study,
we propose a zero-shot bearing fault detection method that can detect any fault
on a new (target) machine regardless of the working conditions, sensor
parameters, or fault characteristics. To accomplish this objective, a 1D
Operational Generative Adversarial Network (Op-GAN) first characterizes the
transition between normal and fault vibration signals of (a) source machine(s)
under various conditions, sensor parameters, and fault types. Then for a target
machine, the potential faulty signals can be generated, and over its actual
healthy and synthesized faulty signals, a compact, and lightweight 1D Self-ONN
fault detector can then be trained to detect the real faulty condition in real
time whenever it occurs. To validate the proposed approach, a new benchmark
dataset is created using two different motors working under different
conditions and sensor locations. Experimental results demonstrate that this
novel approach can accurately detect any bearing fault achieving an average
recall rate of around 89% and 95% on two target machines regardless of its
type, severity, and location.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, Journa
Fieldlike and antidamping spin-orbit torques in as-grown and annealed Ta/CoFeB/MgO layers
Under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC-BY).-- et al.We present a comprehensive study of the current-induced spin-orbit torques in perpendicularly magnetized Ta/CoFeB/MgO layers. The samples were annealed in steps up to 300 °C and characterized using x-ray-absorption spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, resistivity, and Hall effect measurements. By performing adiabatic harmonic Hall voltage measurements, we show that the transverse (fieldlike) and longitudinal (antidampinglike) spin-orbit torques are composed of constant and magnetization-dependent contributions, both of which vary strongly with annealing. Such variations correlate with changes of the saturation magnetization and magnetic anisotropy and are assigned to chemical and structural modifications of the layers. The relative variation of the constant and anisotropic torque terms as a function of annealing temperature is opposite for the fieldlike and antidamping torques. Measurements of the switching probability using sub-μs current pulses show that the critical current increases with the magnetic anisotropy of the layers, whereas the switching efficiency, measured as the ratio of magnetic anisotropy energy and pulse energy, decreases. The optimal annealing temperature to achieve maximum magnetic anisotropy, saturation magnetization, and switching efficiency is determined to be between 240 and 270°C.This work was supported by the the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Programme (GA 318144, SPOT), the European Research Council (StG 203239 NOMAD), the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MAT2010-15659), and the Swiss Competence Centre for Materials Science and Technology (CCMX).Peer Reviewe
Time- and spatially-resolved magnetization dynamics driven by spin-orbit torques
Current-induced spin-orbit torques (SOTs) represent one of the most effective
ways to manipulate the magnetization in spintronic devices. The orthogonal
torque-magnetization geometry, the strong damping, and the large domain wall
velocities inherent to materials with strong spin-orbit coupling make SOTs
especially appealing for fast switching applications in nonvolatile memory and
logic units. So far, however, the timescale and evolution of the magnetization
during the switching process have remained undetected. Here, we report the
direct observation of SOT-driven magnetization dynamics in Pt/Co/AlO dots
during current pulse injection. Time-resolved x-ray images with 25 nm spatial
and 100 ps temporal resolution reveal that switching is achieved within the
duration of a sub-ns current pulse by the fast nucleation of an inverted domain
at the edge of the dot and propagation of a tilted domain wall across the dot.
The nucleation point is deterministic and alternates between the four dot
quadrants depending on the sign of the magnetization, current, and external
field. Our measurements reveal how the magnetic symmetry is broken by the
concerted action of both damping-like and field-like SOT and show that
reproducible switching events can be obtained for over reversal
cycles
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