692 research outputs found
Frequency-dependent effective permeability tensor of unsaturated polycrystalline ferrites
Frequency-dependent permeability tensor for unsaturated polycrystalline
ferrites is derived through an effective medium approximation that combines
both domain-wall motion and rotation of domains in a single consistent
scattering framework. Thus derived permeability tensor is averaged on a
distribution function of the free energy that encodes paramagnetic states for
anhysteretic loops. The initial permeability is computed and frequency spectra
are given by varying macroscopic remanent field.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figure
Universality of thermally assisted magnetic domain wall motion under spin torque
Thermally assisted motion of magnetic domain wall under spin torque is
studied theoretically. It is shown that the wall velocity depends
exponentially on the spin current,
\Is, below the threshold value, in the same way as in a thermally activated
motion driven by a force. A novel property of the spin torque driven case at
low temperature is that the linear term in spin current is universal, i.e.,
\ln v \sim \frac{\pi\hbar}{2e}(\Is/\kB T). This behavior, which is
independent of pinning and material constants, could be used to confirm
experimentally the spin torque as the driving mechanism
Switching dynamics of a magnetostrictive single-domain nanomagnet subjected to stress
The temporal evolution of the magnetization vector of a single-domain
magnetostrictive nanomagnet, subjected to in-plane stress, is studied by
solving the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation. The stress is ramped up linearly
in time and the switching delay, which is the time it takes for the
magnetization to flip, is computed as a function of the ramp rate. For high
levels of stress, the delay exhibits a non-monotonic dependence on the ramp
rate, indicating that there is an {\it optimum} ramp rate to achieve the
shortest delay. For constant ramp rate, the delay initially decreases with
increasing stress but then saturates showing that the trade-off between the
delay and the stress (or the energy dissipated in switching) becomes less and
less favorable with increasing stress. All of these features are due to a
complex interplay between the in-plane and out-of-plane dynamics of the
magnetization vector induced by stress
Analysis Of Measured Transport Properties Of Domain Walls In Magnetic Nanowires And Films
Existing data for soft magnetic materials of critical current for domain-wall
motion, wall speed driven by a magnetic field, and wall electrical resistance,
show that all three observable properties are related through a single
parameter: the wall mobility . The reciprocal of represents the
strength of viscous friction between domain wall and conduction-electron gas.
And is a function of the wall width, which depends in turn on the aspect
ratio t/w, where t and w are the thickness and width of the sample. Over four
orders of magnitude of , the data for nanowires show . This dependence is in approximate agreement with the prediction
of the 1984 Berger theory based on s-d exchange. On the other hand, it is
inconsistent with the prediction of the 2004 Tatara and Kohno theory, and of
the 2004 Zhang and Li theory.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; submitted to Phys. Rev.
Giant Antiferromagnetically Coupled Moments in a Molecule-Based Magnet with Interpenetrating Lattices
The molecule-based magnet [Ru(OCMe)][Cr(CN)] contains two
weakly-coupled, interpenetrating sublattices in a body-centered cubic
structure. Although the field-dependent magnetization indicates a metamagnetic
transition from an antiferromagnet to a paramagnet, the hysteresis loop also
exhibits a substantial magnetic remanance and coercive field uncharacteristic
of a typical metamagnet. We demonstrate that this material behaves like two
giant moments with a weak antiferromagnetic coupling and a large energy barrier
between the orientations of each moment. Because the sublattice moments only
weakly depend on field in the transition region, the magnetic correlation
length can be directly estimated from the magnetization.Comment: 3 figure
Measurements of thermodynamic and transport properties of EuC: a low-temperature analogue of EuO
EuC is a ferromagnet with a Curie-temperature of K. It
is semiconducting with the particularity that the resistivity drops by about 5
orders of magnitude on cooling through , which is therefore called a
metal-insulator transition. In this paper we study the magnetization, specific
heat, thermal expansion, and the resistivity around this ferromagnetic
transition on high-quality EuC samples. At we observe well defined
anomalies in the specific heat and thermal expansion data.
The magnetic contributions of and can satisfactorily be
described within a mean-field theory, taking into account the magnetization
data. In zero magnetic field the magnetic contributions of the specific heat
and thermal expansion fulfill a Gr\"uneisen-scaling, which is not preserved in
finite fields. From an estimation of the pressure dependence of via
Ehrenfest's relation, we expect a considerable increase of under applied
pressure due to a strong spin-lattice coupling. Furthermore the influence of
weak off stoichiometries in EuC was studied. It is
found that strongly affects the resistivity, but hardly changes the
transition temperature. In all these aspects, the behavior of EuC strongly
resembles that of EuO.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Ultrafast Magneto-Acoustics in Nickel Films
We report about the existence of magneto-acoustic pulses propagating in a
200-nm-thick ferromagnetic nickel film excited with 120 fs laser pulses. They
result from the coupling between the magnetization of the ferromagnetic film
and the longitudinal acoustic waves associated to the propagation of the
lattice deformation induced by the femtosecond laser pulses. The
magneto-acoustic pulses are detected from both the front and back sides of the
film, using the time-resolved magneto-optical Kerr technique, measuring both
the time dependent rotation and ellipticity. We show that the propagating
acoustic pulse couples efficiently to the magnetization and is strong enough to
induce a precession of the magnetization. It is due to a transient change of
the crystalline anisotropy associated to the lattice deformation. It is shown
that the results can be interpreted by combining the concepts of acoustic pulse
propagation and ultrafast magnetization dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Submitted to Physical Review Letters on November
30th 201
Anisotropic magnetoresistance of bulk carbon nanotube sheets
We have measured the magnetoresistance of stretched sheets of carbon
nanotubes in temperatures ranging from 2 K to 300 K and in magnetic fields up
to 9 T, oriented either perpendicular or parallel to the plane of the sheets.
The samples have been partially aligned by post-fabrication stretching, such
that the direction of stretching was either parallel or perpendicular to the
direction of applied electric current. We have observed large differences
between the magnetoresistance measured under the two field orientations, most
pronounced at the lowest temperatures, highest fields, and for the
laterally-aligned sample. Treatment of the sheets with nitric acid affects this
anisotropy. We analyzed the results within the theoretical framework of weak
and strong localization and concluded that the anisotropy bears the mark of a
more unusual phenomenon, possibly magnetically-induced mechanical strain.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure
Acoustically driven ferromagnetic resonance
Surface acoustic waves (SAW) in the GHz frequency range are exploited for the
all-elastic excitation and detection of ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) in a
ferromagnetic/ferroelectric (nickel/lithium niobate) hybrid device. We measure
the SAW magneto-transmission at room temperature as a function of frequency,
external magnetic field magnitude, and orientation. Our data are well described
by a modified Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert approach, in which a virtual,
strain-induced tickle field drives the magnetization precession. This causes a
distinct magnetic field orientation dependence of elastically driven FMR that
we observe in both model and experiment.Comment: 4 page
Fundamental Magnetic Properties and Structural Implications for Nanocrystalline Fe-Ti-N Thin Films
The magnetization (M) as a function of temperature (T) from 2 to 300 K and
in-plane field (H) up to 1 kOe, room temperature easy and hard direction
in-plane field hysteresis loops for fields between -100 and +100 Oe, and 10 GHz
ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) profiles have been measured for a series of
soft-magnetic nano-crystalline 50 nm thick Fe-Ti-N films made by magnetron
sputtering in an in-plane field. The nominal titanium concentration was 3 at. %
and the nitrogen concentrations (xN) ranged from zero to 12.7 at. %. The
saturation magnetization (Ms) vs. T data and the extracted exchange parameters
as a function of xN are consistent with a lattice expansion due to the addition
of interstitial nitrogen in the body-centered-cubic (bcc) lattice and a
structural transition to body-centered-tetragonal (bct) in the 6-8 at. %
nitrogen range. The hysteresis loop and FMR data show a consistent picture of
the changes in both the uniaxial and cubic anisotropy as a function of xN.
Films with xN > 1.9 at. % show an overall uniaxial anisotropy, with an
anisotropy field parameter Hu that increases with xN. The corresponding
dispersion averaged uniaxial anisotropy energy density parameter = HuMs/2
is a linear function of xN, with a rate of increase of 950 erg/cm3 per at. %
nitrogen. The estimated uniaxial anisotropy energy per nitrogen atom is 30
J/mol, a value consistent with other systems. For xN below 6 at. %, the scaling
of coercive force Hc data with the sixth power of the grain size D indicate a
grain averaged effective cubic anisotropy energy density parameter that is
about an order of magnitude smaller that the nominal K1 values for iron, and
give a quantitative vs. D response that matches predictions for exchange
coupled random grains with cubic anisotropy.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
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