30 research outputs found
Ferromagnetic resonance and interlayer exchange coupling in magnetic multilayers with compositional gradients
Ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) in magnetic multilayers of type F1/f/F2, where
two strongly ferromagnetic layers F1 and F2 are separated by a weakly magnetic
spacer f with a compositional gradient along its thickness, is investigated.
The method allows to detect the weak signal from the spacer in additional to
the more pronounced and readily measured signal from the outer
strongly-magnetic layers, and thereby study the properties of the spacer as
well as the interlayer exchange interaction it mediates. Variable temperature
FMR measurements, especially near the relevant Curie points, reveal a rich set
of properties of the exchange interactions in the system. The obtained results
are useful for designing and optimizing nanostructures with
thermally-controlled magnetic properties.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Giant and reversible extrinsic magnetocaloric effects in La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 films due to strain
Large thermal changes driven by a magnetic field have been proposed for
environmentally friendly energy efficient refrigeration, but only a few
materials which suffer hysteresis show these giant magnetocaloric effects. Here
we create giant and reversible extrinsic magnetocaloric effects in epitaxial
films of the ferromagnetic manganite La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 using strain mediated
feedback from BaTiO3 substrates near a first-order structural phase transition.
Our findings should inspire the discovery of giant magnetocaloric effects in a
wide range of magnetic materials, and the parallel development of
nanostructured bulk samples for practical applications.Comment: 32 pages, 1 Table, 5 figures, supplementary informatio
Antiferromagnet-mediated interlayer exchange: hybridization versus proximity effect
We investigate the interlayer coupling between two thin ferromagnetic (F)
films mediated by an antiferromagnetic (AF) spacer in F*/AF/F trilayers and
show how it transitions between different regimes on changing the AF thickness.
Employing layer-selective Kerr magnetometry and ferromagnetic-resonance
techniques in a complementary manner enables us to distinguish between three
functionally distinct regimes of such ferromagnetic interlayer coupling. The F
layers are found to be individually and independently exchange-biased for thick
FeMn spacers - the first regime of no interlayer F-F* coupling. F-F* coupling
appears on decreasing the FeMn thickness below 9 nm. In this second regime
found in structures with 6.0-9.0 nm thick FeMn spacers, the interlayer coupling
exists only in a finite temperature interval just below the effective N\'eel
temperature of the spacer, which is due to magnon-mediated exchange through the
thermally softened antiferromagnetic spacer, vanishing at lower temperatures.
The third regime, with FeMn thinner than 4 nm, is characterized by a much
stronger interlayer coupling in the entire temperature interval, which is
attributed to a magnetic-proximity induced ferromagnetic exchange. These
experimental results, spanning the key geometrical parameters and thermal
regimes of the F*/AF/F nanostructure, complemented by a comprehensive
theoretical analysis, should broaden the understanding of the interlayer
exchange in magnetic multilayers and potentially be useful for applications in
spin-thermionics.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure