38 research outputs found

    All-thermal switching of amorphous Gd-Fe alloys: analysis of structural properties and magnetization dynamics

    Get PDF
    In recent years, there has been an intense interest in understanding the microscopic mechanism of thermally induced magnetization switching driven by a femtosecond laser pulse. Most of the effort has been dedicated to periodic crystalline structures while the amorphous counterparts have been less studied. By using a multiscale approach, i.e. first-principles density functional theory combined with atomistic spin dynamics, we report here on the very intricate structural and magnetic nature of amorphous Gd-Fe alloys for a wide range of Gd and Fe atomic concentrations at the nanoscale level. Both structural and dynamical properties of Gd-Fe alloys reported in this work are in good agreement with previous experiments. We calculated the dynamic behavior of homogeneous and inhomogeneous amorphous Gd-Fe alloys and their response under the influence of a femtosecond laser pulse. In the homogeneous sample, the Fe sublattice switches its magnetization before the Gd one. However, the temporal sequence of the switching of the two sublattices is reversed in the inhomogeneous sample. We propose a possible explanation based on a mechanism driven by a combination of the Dzyaloshiskii-Moriya interaction and exchange frustration, modeled by an antiferromagnetic second-neighbour exchange interaction between Gd atoms in the Gd-rich region. We also report on the influence of laser fluence and damping effects in the all-thermal switching.Comment: Accepted in Physical Review B as a regular article. It contains 14 pages and 14 figure

    Impulsive Fermi magnon-phonon resonance in antiferromagnetic CoF2CoF_{2}

    Full text link
    Understanding spin-lattice interactions in antiferromagnets is one of the most fundamental issues at the core of the recently emerging and booming fields of antiferromagnetic spintronics and magnonics. Recently, coherent nonlinear spin-lattice coupling was discovered in an antiferromagnet which opened the possibility to control the nonlinear coupling strength and thus showing a novel pathway to coherently control magnon-phonon dynamics. Here, utilizing intense narrow band terahertz (THz) pulses and tunable magnetic fields up to 7 T, we experimentally realize the conditions of the Fermi magnon-phonon resonance in antiferromagnetic CoF2CoF_{2}. These conditions imply that both the spin and the lattice anharmonicities harvest energy transfer between the subsystems, if the magnon eigenfrequency fmf_{m} is twice lower than the frequency of the phonon 2fm=fph2f_{m}=f_{ph}. Performing THz pump-infrared probe spectroscopy in conjunction with simulations, we explore the coupled magnon-phonon dynamics in the vicinity of the Fermi-resonance and reveal the corresponding fingerprints of an impulsive THz-induced response. This study focuses on the role of nonlinearity in spin-lattice interactions, providing insights into the control of coherent magnon-phonon energy exchange

    Terahertz Magnon-Polaritons in TmFeO3

    Get PDF
    Magnon-polaritons are shown to play a dominant role in the propagation of terahertz (THz) waves through TmFeO3 orthoferrite, if the frequencies of the waves are in the vicinity of the quasi-antiferromagnetic spin resonance mode. Both time-domain THz transmission and emission spectroscopies reveal clear beatings between two modes with frequencies slightly above and slightly below this resonance, respectively. Rigorous modeling of the interaction between the spins of TmFeO3 and the THz light shows that the frequencies correspond to the upper and lower magnon-polariton branches. Our findings reveal the previously ignored importance of propagation effects and polaritons in such heavily debated areas as THz magnonics and THz spectroscopy of electromagnons. It also shows that future progress in these areas calls for an interdisciplinary approach at the interface between magnetism and photonics

    Interface-induced phenomena in magnetism

    Full text link

    Laser-Induced Transient Anisotropy and Large Amplitude Magnetization Dynamics in a Gd/FeCo Multilayer

    Get PDF
    Ultrafast laser-induced dynamics in a ferrimagnetic gadolinium iron cobalt (Gd/FeCo) multilayer with a magnetization compensation temperature of TM = 320 K is studied at room temperature as a function of laser-fluence and strength of the applied magnetic field. The dynamics is found to be substantially different from that in archetypical GdFeCo alloys, and depending on the laser fluence one can distinguish two different regimes. At low laser fluence (⩽1.6 mJ cm-2), ultrafast laser excitation of the medium triggers spin precession of an extraordinary large amplitude reaching over 30°. At high laser fluence (⩾2.2 mJ cm-2), the pump heats the medium over the magnetization compensation point, spin precession reduces significantly in amplitude and the process of field-assisted reversal of magnetization of Gd and FeCo is launched. It is argued that such a distinctly different laser-induced magnetization dynamics in the multilayers compared to the alloys is due to the symmetry breaking at the numerous interfaces, giving rise to additional surface anisotropy. The temperature dependence of the latter is found to be the key ingredient in the mechanism of ultrafast laser-induced magnetization dynamics in ferrimagnetic multilayers. Controlling the amount and properties of interfaces in multilayers can thus serve as a mean to achieve efficient ultrafast all-optical control of magnetism

    ALL-OPTICAL SWITCHING Three rules of design

    No full text
    Contains fulltext : 127887.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
    corecore