1 research outputs found
Ultralow Damping in Nanometer-Thick Epitaxial Spinel Ferrite Thin Films
Pure
spin currents, unaccompanied by dissipative charge flow, are
essential for realizing energy-efficient nanomagnetic information
and communications devices. Thin-film magnetic insulators have been
identified as promising materials for spin-current technology because
they are thought to exhibit lower damping compared with their metallic
counterparts. However, insulating behavior is not a sufficient requirement
for low damping, as evidenced by the very limited options for low-damping
insulators. Here, we demonstrate a new class of nanometer-thick ultralow-damping
insulating thin films based on design criteria that minimize orbital
angular momentum and structural disorder. Specifically, we show ultralow
damping in <20 nm thick spinel-structure magnesium aluminum ferrite
(MAFO), in which magnetization arises from Fe<sup>3+</sup> ions with
zero orbital angular momentum. These epitaxial MAFO thin films exhibit
a Gilbert damping parameter of ∼0.0015 and negligible inhomogeneous
linewidth broadening, resulting in narrow half width at half-maximum
linewidths of ∼0.6 mT around 10 GHz. Our findings offer an
attractive thin-film platform for enabling integrated insulating spintronics