156 research outputs found

    Quantum States of Neutrons in Magnetic Thin Films

    Full text link
    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

    Probing vertically graded anisotropy in FePtCu films

    Get PDF
    Field-dependent polarized neutron reflectivity (PNR) and magnetometry are employed to study the magnetic properties of compositionally uniform and graded FePtCu films as a function of annealing temperature (TA). The PNR results are able to directly probe the compositional and anisotropy variations through the film thickness. Further details about how the reversal mechanisms evolve are then elucidated by using a first-order reversal curve technique. The reversal of the graded sample annealed at 300º C occurs by an initial rapid switching of the dominant soft A1 phase toward the surface of the film, followed by the gradual reversal of the residual hard phase components toward the bottom. This indicates that the anisotropy gradient is not well established at this low TA. A fundamentally different mechanism is found after annealing at 400ºC, where the rapid switching of the entire film is preceded by a gradual reversal of the soft layers. This suggests that the anisotropy gradient has become better established through the film thickness. The field-dependent PNR measurements confirm the existence of an anisotropy gradient, where the lower (higher) anisotropy portions are now toward the bottom (top) of the film because of the Cu compositional gradient. However, after annealing at 500º C,a single rapid reversal is found, indicating the formation of a uniform hard film. In this case, PNR demonstrates a more uniform magnetic depth profile that is consistent with a uniform reference sample, suggesting significant interdiffusion of the Cu is degrading the compositional and induced anisotropy gradient at this elevated TA

    Polarized neutron reflectivity studies of magnetic semiconductor superlattices

    Get PDF
    Abstract Polarized neutron reflectivity studies of EuS/PbS, EuS/YbSe and GaMnAs/GaAs superlattices performed at the NIST Center for Neutron Research are presented. Pronounced antiferromagnetic (AFM) interlayer coupling has been found in EuS/PbS superlattices for a very broad range of PbS spacer thicknesses. Similar, but weaker, AFM coupling is also present in EuS/YbSe, although only for relatively thin YbSe layers. Neutron polarization analysis shows distinct in-plane asymmetry of the magnetization directions of EuS layers in both systems under investigation. For GaMnAs/GaAs superlattices, ferromagnetic (FM) interlayer correlations have been observed. Polarized neutron reflectometry investigations of several GaMnAs/GaAs superlattices have revealed that the manganese magnetic moments in individual GaMnAs layers, in spite of low Mn concentration, form a truly long range, that is in certain cases a single domain, ferromagnetic state.

    The High-Flux Backscattering Spectrometer at the NIST Center for Neutron Research

    Full text link
    We describe the design and current performance of the high-flux backscattering spectrometer located at the NIST Center for Neutron Research. The design incorporates several state-of-the-art neutron optical devices to achieve the highest flux on sample possible while maintaining an energy resolution of less than 1mueV. Foremost among these is a novel phase-space transformation chopper that significantly reduces the mismatch between the beam divergences of the primary and secondary parts of the instrument. This resolves a long-standing problem of backscattering spectrometers, and produces a relative gain in neutron flux of 4.2. A high-speed Doppler-driven monochromator system has been built that is capable of achieving energy transfers of up to +-50mueV, thereby extending the dynamic range of this type of spectrometer by more than a factor of two over that of other reactor-based backscattering instruments

    Feasibility of study magnetic proximity effects in bilayer "superconductor/ferromagnet" using waveguide-enhanced Polarized Neutron Reflectometry

    Full text link
    A resonant enhancement of the neutron standing waves is proposed to use in order to increase the magnetic neutron scattering from a "superconductor/ferromagnet"(S/F) bilayer. The model calculations show that usage of this effect allows to increase the magnetic scattering intensity by factor of hundreds. Aspects related to the growth procedure (order of deposition, roughness of the layers etc) as well as experimental conditions (resolution, polarization of the neutron beam, background etc) are also discussed. Collected experimental data for the S/F heterostructure Cu(32nm)/V(40nm)/Fe(1nm)/MgO confirmed the presence of a resonant 60-fold amplification of the magnetic scattering.Comment: The manuscript of the article submitted to Crysstalography Reports. 23 pages, 5 figure

    Ferromagnetic Domain Distribution in Thin Films During Magnetization Reversal

    Full text link
    We have shown that polarized neutron reflectometry can determine in a model-free way not only the mean magnetization of a ferromagnetic thin film at any point of a hysteresis cycle, but also the mean square dispersion of the magnetization vectors of its lateral domains. This technique is applied to elucidate the mechanism of the magnetization reversal of an exchange-biased Co/CoO bilayer. The reversal process above the blocking temperature is governed by uniaxial domain switching, while below the blocking temperature the reversal of magnetization for the trained sample takes place with substantial domain rotation

    Crossover between aperiodic and homogeneous semi-infinite critical behaviors in multilayered two-dimensional Ising models

    Full text link
    We investigate the surface critical behavior of two-dimensional multilayered aperiodic Ising models in the extreme anisotropic limit. The system under consideration is obtained by piling up two types of layers with respectively pp and qq spin rows coupled via nearest neighbor interactions λr\lambda r and λ\lambda, where the succession of layers follows an aperiodic sequence. Far away from the critical regime, the correlation length ξ\xi_\perp is smaller than the first layer width and the system exhibits the usual behavior of an ordinary surface transition. In the other limit, in the neighborhood of the critical point, ξ\xi_\perp diverges and the fluctuations are sensitive to the non-periodic structure of the system so that the critical behavior is governed by a new fixed point. We determine the critical exponent associated to the surface magnetization at the aperiodic critical point and show that the expected crossover between the two regimes is well described by a scaling function. From numerical calculations, the parallel correlation length ξ\xi_\parallel is then found to behave with an anisotropy exponent zz which depends on the aperiodic modulation and the layer widths.Comment: LaTeX file, 9 pages, 8 eps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Anomalous Diffusion in Aperiodic Environments

    Full text link
    We study the Brownian motion of a classical particle in one-dimensional inhomogeneous environments where the transition probabilities follow quasiperiodic or aperiodic distributions. Exploiting an exact correspondence with the transverse-field Ising model with inhomogeneous couplings we obtain many new analytical results for the random walk problem. In the absence of global bias the qualitative behavior of the diffusive motion of the particle and the corresponding persistence probability strongly depend on the fluctuation properties of the environment. In environments with bounded fluctuations the particle shows normal diffusive motion and the diffusion constant is simply related to the persistence probability. On the other hand in a medium with unbounded fluctuations the diffusion is ultra-slow, the displacement of the particle grows on logarithmic time scales. For the borderline situation with marginal fluctuations both the diffusion exponent and the persistence exponent are continuously varying functions of the aperiodicity. Extensions of the results to disordered media and to higher dimensions are also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, RevTe

    Asymmetric magnetization reversal in exchange-biased hysteresis loops

    Get PDF
    This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics.Polarized neutron reflectometry is used to probe the in-plane projection of the net-magnetization vector M of polycrystalline Fe films exchange coupled to twinned (110) MnF2 or FeF2 antiferromagnetic (AF) layers. The magnetization reversal mechanism depends upon the orientation of the cooling field with respect to the twinned microstructure of the AF, and whether the applied field is increased to (or decreased from) a positive saturating field; i.e., the magnetization reversal is asymmetric. The reversal of the sample magnetization from one saturated state to the other occurs via either domain wall motion or magnetization rotation on opposite sides of the same hysteresis loop
    corecore