29 research outputs found
Micromagnetic modelling of anisotropic damping in ferromagnet
We report a numerical implementation of the Landau-Lifshitz-Baryakhtar
theory, which dictates that the micromagnetic relaxation term obeys the
symmetry of the magnetic crystal, i. e. replacing the single intrinsic damping
constant with a tensor of corresponding symmetry. The effect of anisotropic
relaxation is studied in thin saturated ferromagnetic disk and ellipse with and
without uniaxial magneto-crystalline anisotropy. We investigate the angular
dependency of the linewidth of magnonic resonances with respect to the given
structure of the relaxation tensor. The simulations suggest that the anisotropy
of the magnonic linewidth is determined by only two factors: the projection of
the relaxation tensor onto the plane of precession and the ellipticity of the
later.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PRB Rapid. Com
Dispersion of collective magnonic modes in stacks of nanoscale magnetic elements
Copyright © 2011 American Physical SocietyWe report a numerical study of the dispersion of collective magnonic modes in magnonic crystals formed by stacks of magnetostatically coupled magnetic nanoelements. The calculations reveal that the sign of the magnonic dispersion is determined by the spatial character and ellipticity of precession for the eigenmodes of the isolated elements that give rise to the magnonic bands. We identify a critical value of the ellipticity at which the dispersion of the collective magnonic modes changes sign. The critical value is independent of the magnetic parameters and shape of the elements but is a characteristic of their arrangement (superstructure)
Numerical Investigations of Spin Waves at the Nanoscale
This thesis contains results of numerical investigations of magnetisation dynamics in nanostructed ferromagnetic materials. Magnetic systems have been simulated using the open source micromagnetic solver: Object Oriented Micromagnetic Framework (OOMMF), and thoroughly analysed using my own software: semargl.
A systematic study of collective magnonic modes confined in 2D and 3D systems of rectangular ferromagnetic nano-elements is presented. The collective character of the excitations results from the dynamic magnetic dipole field. The magnetization dynamics of isolated rectangular elements is found to be spatially non-uniform which means that the dynamic dipolar coupling is highly anisotropic. A semi-analytical theory of collective magnonic modes has been developed to evaluate the properties of the dynamic magnetic dipole field. It was found that the theory is only valid for certain eigenmodes of the isolated element. In particular the modes where the magnetic dipole coupling between the elements is much lower than the internal energy of the corresponding eigenmodes of the isolated element.
It is then demonstrated that the confinement of spin waves is strongly affected by the ground state of the system. In particular it has been found that symmetry properties of the topology of 2D arrays affect the dynamics of the strongly localised modes. The effect is found to be significant for arrays of any number of elements. At the same time the relative contribution of the localized modes to the uniform response decreases with the number of elements in the array.
The dispersion relation of spin waves in 2D arrays of rectangular nano-elements has been calculated for the first time using micromagnetic simulations. The form of the dispersion is used to estimate the spatial anisotropy of the dynamic dipolar coupling.
Simulations of the 3D confinement of spin waves in stacks of magnetic nano-elements have been performed. The calculation of both the dispersion and spatial profiles of the corresponding magnonic modes facilitates the investigation of the localisation of collective spin waves. Furthermore the dispersion of collective magnonic modes has been calculated for stacks of rectangular nano-elements for a range of in-plane aspect ratios.
Finally, a numerical method has been developed to extract the scattering parameters of magnonic logic devices. This method has been demonstrated by applying it to the simplest possible magnonic device so that the results could be compared to an analytical expression of the scattering parameters.EC 7th Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under GA 233552 (DYNAMAG)University of Exeter ORSAS Top-up awardUniversity of Exeter School of Physics Scholarship KJ/ACK/580026263/
Nanoscale spin wave valve and phase shifter
Copyright © 2012 American Institute of PhysicsWe have used micromagnetic simulations to demonstrate a method for controlling the amplitude and phase of spin waves propagating inside a magnonic waveguide. The method employs a nanomagnet formed on top of a magnonic waveguide. The function of the proposed device is controlled by defining the static magnetization direction of the nanomagnet. The result is a valve or phase shifter for spin waves, acting as the carrier of information for computation or data processing within the emerging spin wave logic architectures of magnonics. The proposed concept offers such technically important benefits as energy efficiency, non-volatility, and miniaturization
The design and verification of Mumax3
We report on the design, verification and performance of mumax3, an
open-source GPU-accelerated micromagnetic simulation program. This software
solves the time- and space dependent magnetization evolution in nano- to micro
scale magnets using a finite-difference discretization. Its high performance
and low memory requirements allow for large-scale simulations to be performed
in limited time and on inexpensive hardware. We verified each part of the
software by comparing results to analytical values where available and to
micromagnetic standard problems. mumax3 also offers specific extensions like
MFM image generation, moving simulation window, edge charge removal and
material grains
Thermodynamically self-consistent non-stochastic micromagnetic model for the ferromagnetic state
In this work, a self-consistent thermodynamic approach to micromagnetism is
presented. The magnetic degrees of freedom are modeled using the
Landau-Lifshitz-Baryakhtar theory, that separates the different contributions
to the magnetic damping, and thereby allows them to be coupled to the electron
and phonon systems in a self-consistent way. We show that this model can
quantitatively reproduce ultrafast magnetization dynamics in Nickel.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure