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Magnetoresistance Anisotropy of Polycrystalline Cobalt Films: Geometrical-Size- and Domain-Effects
The magnetoresistance (MR) of 10 nm to 200 nm thin polycrystalline Co-films,
deposited on glass and insulating Si(100), is studied in fields up to 120 kOe,
aligned along the three principal directions with respect to the current:
longitudinal, transverse (in-plane), and polar (out-of-plane). At technical
saturation, the anisotropic MR (AMR) in polar fields turns out to be up to
twice as large as in transverse fields, which resembles the yet unexplained
geometrical size-effect (GSE), previously reported for Ni- and Permalloy films.
Upon increasing temperature, the polar and transverse AMR's are reduced by
phonon-mediated sd-scattering, but their ratio, i.e. the GSE remains unchanged.
Basing on Potters's theory [Phys.Rev.B 10, 4626(1974)], we associate the GSE
with an anisotropic effect of the spin-orbit interaction on the sd-scattering
of the minority spins due to a film texture. Below magnetic saturation, the
magnitudes and signs of all three MR's depend significantly on the domain
structures depicted by magnetic force microscopy. Based on hysteresis loops and
taking into account the GSE within an effective medium approach, the three MR's
are explained by the different magnetization processes in the domain states.
These reveal the importance of in-plane uniaxial anisotropy and out-of-plane
texture for the thinnest and thickest films, respectively.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure