2,912 research outputs found

    Neutron methods for the direct determination of the magnetic induction in thick films

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    We review different neutron methods which allow extracting directly the value of the magnetic induction in thick films: Larmor precession, Zeeman spatial beam-splitting and neutron spin resonance. Resulting parameters obtained by the neutron methods and standard magnetometry technique are presented and compared. The possibilities and specificities of the neutron methods are discussed

    Quantum States of Neutrons in Magnetic Thin Films

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    We have studied experimentally and theoretically the interaction of polarized neutrons with magnetic thin films and magnetic multilayers. In particular, we have analyzed the behavior of the critical edges for total external reflection in both cases. For a single film we have observed experimentally and theoretically a simple behavior: the critical edges remain fixed and the intensity varies according to the angle between the polarization axis and the magnetization vector inside the film. For the multilayer case we find that the critical edges for spin up and spin down polarized neutrons move towards each other as a function of the angle between the magnetization vectors in adjacent ferromagnetic films. Although the results for multilayers and single thick layers appear to be different, in fact the same spinor method explains both results. An interpretation of the critical edges behavior for the multilyers as a superposition of ferromagnetic and antifferomagnetic states is given.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure

    Polarized neutron channeling as a tool for the investigations of weakly magnetic thin films

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    We present and apply a new method to measure directly weak magnetization in thin films. The polarization of a neutron beam channeling through a thin film structure is measured after exiting the structure edge as a microbeam. We have applied the method to a tri-layer thin film structure acting as a planar waveguide for polarized neutrons. The middle guiding layer is a rare earth based ferrimagnetic material TbCo5 with a low magnetization of about 20 mT. We demonstrate that the channeling method is more sensitive than the specular neutron reflection method

    Divergence of the Magnetic Gr\"{u}neisen Ratio at the Field-Induced Quantum Critical Point in YbRh2_2Si2_2

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    The heavy fermion compound YbRh2_2Si2_2 is studied by low-temperature magnetization M(T)M(T) and specific-heat C(T)C(T) measurements at magnetic fields close to the quantum critical point (Hc=0.06H_c=0.06 T, H⊥cH\perp c). Upon approaching the instability, dM/dTdM/dT is more singular than C(T)C(T), leading to a divergence of the magnetic Gr\"uneisen ratio Γmag=−(dM/dT)/C\Gamma_{\rm mag}=-(dM/dT)/C. Within the Fermi liquid regime, Γmag=−Gr(H−Hcfit)\Gamma_{\rm mag}=-G_r(H-H_c^{fit}) with Gr=−0.30±0.01G_r=-0.30\pm 0.01 and Hcfit=(0.065±0.005)H_c^{fit}=(0.065\pm 0.005) T which is consistent with scaling behavior of the specific-heat coefficient in YbRh2_2(Si0.95_{0.95}Ge0.05_{0.05})2_2. The field-dependence of dM/dTdM/dT indicates an inflection point of the entropy as a function of magnetic field upon passing the line T⋆(H)T^\star(H) previously observed in Hall- and thermodynamic measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Figure

    Training Induced Positive Exchange Bias in NiFe/IrMn Bilayers

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    Positive exchange bias has been observed in the Ni81_{81}Fe19_{19}/Ir20_{20}Mn80_{80} bilayer system via soft x-ray resonant magnetic scattering. After field cooling of the system through the blocking temperature of the antiferromagnet, an initial conventional negative exchange bias is removed after training i. e. successive magnetization reversals, resulting in a positive exchange bias for a temperature range down to 30 K below the blocking temperature (450 K). This new manifestation of magnetic training is discussed in terms of metastable magnetic disorder at the magnetically frustrated interface during magnetization reversal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    The exchange bias phenomenon in uncompensated interfaces: Theory and Monte Carlo simulations

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    We performed Monte Carlo simulations in a bilayer system composed by two thin films, one ferromagnetic (FM) and the other antiferromagnetic (AFM). Two lattice structures for the films were considered: simple cubic (sc) and a body center cubic (bcc). In both lattices structures we imposed an uncompensated interfacial spin structure, in particular we emulated a FeF2-FM system in the case of the (bcc) lattice. Our analysis focused on the incidence of the interfacial strength interactions between the films J_eb and the effect of thermal fluctuations on the bias field H_EB. We first performed Monte Carlo simulations on a microscopic model based on classical Heisenberg spin variables. To analyze the simulation results we also introduced a simplified model that assumes coherent rotation of spins located on the same layer parallel to the interface. We found that, depending on the AFM film anisotropy to exchange ratio, the bias field is either controlled by the intrinsic pinning of a domain wall parallel to the interface or by the stability of the first AFM layer (quasi domain wall) near the interface.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
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