92 research outputs found
Thermoelectrically Controlled Spin-Switch
The search for novel spintronic devices brings about new ways to control
switching in magnetic thin-films. In this work we experimentally demonstrate a
device based on thermoelectrically controlled exchange coupling. The read out
signal from a giant magnetoresistance element is controlled by exchange
coupling through a weakly ferromagnetic Ni-Cu alloy. This exchange coupling is
shown to vary strongly with changes in temperature, and both internal Joule
heating and external heating is used to demonstrate magnetic switching. The
device shows no degradation upon thermal cycling. Ways to further optimize the
device performance are discussed. Our experimental results show a new way to
thermoelectrically control magnetic switching in multilayers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Exchange coupling and magnetoresistance in CoFe/NiCu/CoFe spin-valves near the Curie point of the spacer
Thermal control of exchange coupling between two strongly ferromagnetic
layers through a weakly ferromagnetic Ni-Cu spacer and the associated
magnetoresistance is investigated. The spacer, having a Curie point slightly
above room temperature, can be cycled between its paramagnetic and
ferromagnetic states by varying the temperature externally or using joule
heating. It is shown that the giant magnetoresistance vanishes due to a strong
reduction of the mean free path in the spacer at above ~30 % Ni concentration
-- before the onset of ferromagnetism. Finally, a device is proposed and
demonstrated which combines thermally controlled exchange coupling and large
magnetoresistance by separating the switching and the read out elements.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
GHz sandwich strip inductors based on Fe-N Films
Planar strip inductors consisting of two Fe-N films enclosing a conducting
film made of Cu, were fabricated on oxidized Si substrates. The inductors were
1mm long, 2 to 100 um wide, with layers of thickness ~0.1 um for the magnetic
films and ~0.5 um for the conductor. The soft (Hc=4-8 Oe) magnetic layers were
biased during impedance measurement by applying an external field along the
strip length thereby facilitating the transverse susceptibility configuration.
Biased strips exhibited 70 to 100% inductance enhancement at 1GHz with quality
factors Q=4.5 to 3, respectively. The magnetic contribution to the total flux
in the narrow devices was less than predicted theoretically, which was
attributed to hardening of the magnetic material at the edges of the strip,
where the deposition was close to 60 degree incidence. Test films were
fabricated on tilted substrates and found to develop a very high anisotropy (up
to 1 kOe) for deposition angles larger than 30 degrees. Optimizing the flux
closure at the strip edges and using thicker conductor layers is essential for
further improving the performance of sandwich strip inductors.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
Sub-10 nm colloidal lithography for integrated spin-photo-electronic devices
Colloidal lithography [1] is how patterns are reproduced in a variety of
natural systems and is used more and more as an efficient fabrication tool in
bio-, opto-, and nano-technology. Nanoparticles in the colloid are made to form
a mask on a given material surface, which can then be transferred via etching
into nano-structures of various sizes, shapes, and patterns [2,3]. Such
nanostructures can be used in biology for detecting proteins [4] and DNA [5,6],
for producing artificial crystals in photonics [7,8] and GHz oscillators in
spin-electronics [9-14]. Scaling of colloidal patterning down to 10-nm and
below, dimensions comparable or smaller than the main relaxation lengths in the
relevant materials, including metals, is expected to enable a variety of new
ballistic transport and photonic devices, such as spin-flip THz lasers [15]. In
this work we extend the practice of colloidal lithography to producing
large-area, near-ballistic-injection, sub-10 nm point-contact arrays and
demonstrate their integration in to spin-photo-electronic devices.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
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