271 research outputs found
Precessional switching of thin nanomagnets: analytical study
We study analytically the precessional switching of the magnetization of a
thin macrospin. We analyze its response when subjected to an external field
along its in-plane hard axis. We derive the exact trajectories of the
magnetization. The switching versus non switching behavior is delimited by a
bifurcation trajectory, for applied fields equal to half of the effective
anisotropy field. A magnetization going through this bifurcation trajectory
passes exactly along the hard axis and exhibits a vanishing characteristic
frequency at that unstable point, which makes the trajectory noise sensitive.
Attempting to approach the related minimal cost in applied field makes the
magnetization final state unpredictable. We add finite damping in the model as
a perturbative, energy dissipation factor. For a large applied field, the
system switches several times back and forth. Several trajectories can be gone
through before the system has dissipated enough energy to converge to one
attracting equilibrium state. For some moderate fields, the system switches
only once by a relaxation dominated precessional switching. We show that the
associated switching field increases linearly with the damping parameter. The
slope scales with the square root of the effective anisotropy. Our simple
concluding expressions are useful to assess the potential application of
precessional switching in magnetic random access memories
Offset fields in perpendicularly magnetized tunnel junctions
We study the offset fields affecting the free layer of perpendicularly
magnetized tunnel junctions. In extended films, the free layer offset field
results from interlayer exchange coupling with the reference layer through the
MgO tunnel oxide. The free layer offset field is thus accompanied with a shift
of the free layer and reference layer ferromagnetic resonance frequencies. The
shifts depend on the mutual orientation of the two magnetizations. The offset
field decreases with the resistance area product of the tunnel oxide.
Patterning the tunnel junction into an STT-MRAM disk-shaped cell changes
substantially the offset field, as the reduction of the lateral dimension comes
with the generation of stray fields by the reference and the hard layer. The
experimental offset field compares best with the spatial average of the sum of
these stray fields, thereby providing guidelines for the offset field
engineering.Comment: Special issue of J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys (2019) on STT-MRA
Exchange stiffness in ultrathin perpendicularly-magnetized CoFeB layers determined using spin wave spectroscopy
We measure the frequencies of spin waves in nm-thick perpendicularly
magnetized FeCoB systems, and model the frequencies to deduce the exchange
stiffness of this material in the ultrathin limit. For this, we embody the
layers in magnetic tunnel junctions patterned into circular nanopillars of
diameters ranging from 100 to 300 nm and we use magneto-resistance to determine
which rf-current frequencies are efficient in populating the spin wave modes.
Micromagnetic calculations indicate that the ultrathin nature of the layer and
the large wave vectors used ensure that the spin wave frequencies are
predominantly determined by the exchange stiffness, such that the number of
modes in a given frequency window can be used to estimate the exchange. For 1
nm layers the experimental data are consistent with an exchange stiffness A= 20
pJ/m, which is slightly lower that its bulk counterpart. The thickness
dependence of the exchange stiffness has strong implications for the numerous
situations that involve ultrathin films hosting strong magnetization gradients,
and the micromagnetic description thereof.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Agility of vortex-based nanocontact spin torque oscillators
We study the agility of current-tunable oscillators based on a magnetic
vortex orbiting around a point contact in spin-valves. Theory predicts
frequency-tuning by currents occurs at constant orbital radius, so an
exceptional agility is anticipated. To test this, we have inserted an
oscillator in a microwave interferometer to apply abrupt current variations
while time resolving its emission. Using frequency shift keying, we show that
the oscillator can switch between two stabilized frequencies differing by 25%
in less than ten periods. With a wide frequency tunability and a good agility,
such oscillators possess desirable figures of merit for modulation-based rf
applications.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
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