108 research outputs found
Effects of impurity atoms on sputtered GMR multilayers
We have investigated the effects of residual
gas impurity atoms on interlayer exchange coupling
and giant magnetoresistance (GMR) in Co(9Ä)/Cu(9Ä)
multilayers. Structural analysis was performed by Co(59)
NMR. We deposited sub-monolayer quantities of residual
gases at different points in the Co/Cu bilayer; the
interfaces, or the middle of the Cu spacers or CO magnetic
layers. Impurities at the interface lower the GMR
and increase remenant fraction and saturation field. We
are able to model these results phenomenologically by
adding biquadratic coupling. Impurities in the bulk of
the Cu layers lower GMR still further, and such samples
are well described by models containing almost
100% biquadratic coupling. We have demonstrated that
the ttansport parameters in our samples are largely
unaffected by small quantities of impurities, but that
the interlayer coupling is extremely sensitive to them,
particularly in the bulk of the Cu spacer layers
Time dependence studies on giant magnetoresistive Co/Cu multilayers
Time dependence studies consisting of applying current
steps at fixed applied fields have been carried out on bilinear and biquadratic giant magnetoresistive (GMR) Co/Cu multilayers in a temperature controlled environment. It has been shown that the voltage responses to current steps of these aged multilayers are greater in magnitude before field cycling compared to those made after field cycling. Normalized voltage measurements for
some samples suggest a magnetic viscosity effect due to a current step at zero-field is present and before field cycling. The effect is reduced after field cycling. This behavior suggests that the effect being seen is purely magnetic in origin, as only the field is being
varied. A ln( ) type function has been curve fitted to the zero field voltage response to a current step before field cycling. Voltage measurements made on the Co/Cu films at different field values show that as the applied fields are increased the voltage response has a reduced ln(t) character
Determination of the copper layer thickness in spin valves by grazing incidence x-ray fluorescence
We show that at the standard laboratory wavelength
of CuKα the scattering factors of Cu and Ni(-0.8)Fe(-0.2) are
identical, thereby making it impossible to distinguish the
boundary of the Cu spacer layer in a Cdpermalloy spin valve
structure from grazing incidence x-ray reflectivity curves. Use of grazing incidence fluorescence, in conjunction with x-ray reflectivity provides sufficient information to control the Cu layer thickness. We demonstrate the technique on two spin valves with Cu spacer layers differing in thickness by a factor
of 2.5
Dynamic pinning at a Py/Co interface measured using inductive magnetometry
Broadband FMR responses for metallic single-layer and bi-layer magnetic films
with total thicknesses smaller than the microwave magnetic skin depth have been
studied. Two different types of microwave transducers were used to excite and
detect magnetization precession: a narrow coplanar waveguide and a wide
microstrip line. Both transducers show efficient excitation of higher-order
standing spin wave modes. The ratio of amplitudes of the first standing spin
wave to the fundamental resonant mode is independent of frequency for single
films. In contrast, we find a strong variation of the amplitudes with frequency
for bi-layers and the ratio is strongly dependent on the ordering of layers
with respect to a stripline transducer. Most importantly, cavity FMR
measurements on the same samples show considerably weaker amplitudes for the
standing spin waves. All experimental data are consistent with expected effects
due to screening by eddy currents in films with thicknesses below the microwave
magnetic skin depth. Finally, conditions for observing eddy current effects in
different types of experiments are critically examined
Experimental evidence for electron channeling in Fe /Au (100) superlattices
We present transport and structural data from epitaxial (100) and (111) Au/Fe superlattices grown by molecular beam epitaxy. From their analysis, we conclude that an electron channeling mechanism, due to strong specular reflection of the minority spin carrier at the Au/Fe interfaces, is responsible for the high conductivity in the (100) superlattices
Room temperature magnetic stabilization of buried cobalt nanoclusters within a ferromagnetic matrix studied by soft x-ray magnetic circular dichroism
Single dusting layers of size-selected Co nanoclusters (NCs) of sizes ranging from 1.5–5.5 nm have been deposited by a gas-phase aggregation method in ultrahigh vacuum, and embedded within a NiFe matrix. Magnetic hysteresis loops have been obtained using soft x-ray magnetic circular dichroism, which shows that these Co NCs embedded in NiFe exhibit room temperature ferromagnetism with identical coercivity to the surrounding NiFe film. The strong local exchange field at the interface between NiFe and Co NCs, combined with the magnetic anisotropy of the NiFe film, allows stabilization of NC ferromagnetism which persists to room temperature
Investigation of ultrafast demagnetization and cubic optical nonlinearity of Ni in the polar geometry
Copyright © 2004 American Institute of PhysicsFemtosecond optical pump-probe experiments were performed upon a Ni(720 Å)/Si(100) sample in the polar geometry with the pump beam close to normal incidence. A signal due to the ultrafast demagnetization effect was observed when the pump pulse was linearly polarized. When the pump was elliptically polarized, additional peaks were observed at zero time delay, resulting from the specular inverse Faraday effect (SIFE) and the specular optical Kerr effect (SOKE). By comparing measurements made with different pump helicities, the SIFE and SOKE peaks and the demagnetization signal were found to superpose in a linear fashion. From the dependence of the peak height upon the pump polarization, values of χxxyy=(1−3i)×10−10 rad cm3 erg−1 and χxyyx=(−9+2i)×10−12 rad cm3 erg−1 were deduced for the nonvanishing components of the local cubic susceptibility tensor. For applied fields less than the saturation value, the sudden reduction of the thin film demagnetizing field leads to an imbalance of the torques acting upon the magnetization, causing it to precess
Accuracy of estimated genomic breeding values for wool and meat traits in a multi-breed sheep population
Estimated breeding values for the selection of more profitable sheep for the sheep meat and wool industries are currently based on pedigree and phenotypic records. With the advent of a medium-density DNA marker array, which genotypes ∼50000 ovine single nucleotide polymorphisms, a third source of information has become available. The aim of this paper was to determine whether this genomic information can be used to predict estimated breeding values for wool and meat traits. The effects of all single nucleotide polymorphism markers in a multi-breed sheep reference population of 7180 individuals with phenotypic records were estimated to derive prediction equations for genomic estimated breeding values (GEBV) for greasy fleece weight, fibre diameter, staple strength, breech wrinkle score, weight at ultrasound scanning, scanned eye muscle depth and scanned fat depth. Five hundred and forty industry sires with very accurate Australian sheep breeding values were used as a validation population and the accuracies of GEBV were assessed according to correlations between GEBV and Australian sheep breeding values . The accuracies of GEBV ranged from 0.15 to 0.79 for wool traits in Merino sheep and from 0.07 to 0.57 for meat traits in all breeds studied. Merino industry sires tended to have more accurate GEBV than terminal and maternal breeds because the reference population consisted mainly of Merino haplotypes. The lower accuracy for terminal and maternal breeds suggests that the density of genetic markers used was not high enough for accurate across-breed prediction of marker effects. Our results indicate that an increase in the size of the reference population will increase the accuracy of GEBV
Antiferromagnetic interlayer exchange coupled Co₆₈B₃₂/Ir/Pt multilayers
Synthetic antiferromagnetic structures can exhibit the advantages of high velocity similarly to antiferromagnets with the additional benefit of being imaged and read-out through techniques applied to ferromagnets. Here, we explore the potential and limits of synthetic antiferromagnets to uncover ways to harness their valuable properties for applications. Two synthetic antiferromagnetic systems have been engineered and systematically investigated to provide an informed basis for creating devices with maximum potential for data storage, logic devices, and skyrmion racetrack memories. The two systems considered are (system 1) CoB/Ir/Pt of N repetitions with Ir inducing the negative coupling between the ferromagnetic layers and (system 2) two ferromagnetically coupled multilayers of CoB/Ir/Pt, coupled together antiferromagnetically with an Ir layer. From the hysteresis, it is found that system 1 shows stable antiferromagnetic interlayer exchange coupling between each magnetic layer up to N = 7. Using Kerr imaging, the two ferromagnetic multilayers in system 2 are shown to undergo separate maze-like switches during hysteresis. Both systems are also studied as a function of temperature and show different behaviors. Micromagnetic simulations predict that in both systems the skyrmion Hall angle is suppressed with the skyrmion velocity five times higher in system 1 than system 2
Observation of a molecular muonium polaron and its application to probing magnetic and electronic states
We thank the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC UK) for support via Grants No. EP/M000923/1, No. EP/K036408/1, No. EP/I004483/1, No. EP/S031081/1, and No. EP/S030263/1. L.L., S.S., D.J. and G.T. acknowledge also support from STFC-ISIS Neutron and Muon Source and Ada Lovelace Centre at STFC-SCD. We acknowledge use of the ARCHER (via the U.K. Car–Parrinello Consortium, EP/P022618/1 and EP/P022189/2), U.K. Materials and Molecular Modelling Hub (EP/P020194/1), and STFC Scientific Computing Department's SCARF HCP facilities. We acknowledge support from the Henry Royce Institute. This work was also supported financially through the EPSRC Grant Nos. EP/ P022464/1, and EP/R00661X/1.Muonium is a combination of first- and second-generation matter formed by the electrostatic interaction between an electron and an antimuon (μ+). Although a well-known physical system, their ability to form collective excitations in molecules had not been observed. Here, we give evidence for the detection of a muonium state that propagates in a molecular semiconductor lattice via thermally activated dynamics: a muonium polaron. By measuring the temperature dependence of the depolarization of the muonium state in C60, we observe a thermal narrowing of the hyperfine distribution that we attribute to the dynamics of the muonium between molecular sites. As a result of the time scale for muonium decay, the energies involved, charge and spin selectivity, this quasiparticle is a widely applicable experimental tool. It is an excellent probe of emerging electronic, dynamic, and magnetic states at interfaces and in low dimensional systems, where direct spatial probing is an experimental challenge owing to the buried interface, nanoscale elements providing the functionality localization and small magnitude of the effects.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
- …