Transmission electron microscopy and ferromagnetic resonance
investigations of tunnel magnetic junctions using Co2MnGe Heusler alloy as
magnetic electrodes
HRTEM, nano-beam electronic diffraction, energy dispersive X-rays scanning
spectroscopy, Vibrating Sample Magnetometry (VSM) and FerroMagnetic Resonance
(FMR) techniques are used in view of comparing (static and dynamic) magnetic
and structural properties of Co2MnGe (13 nm)/Al2O3 (3 nm)/Co (13 nm) tunnel
magnetic junctions (TMJ), deposited on various single crystalline substrates
(a-plane sapphire, MgO(100) and Si(111)). They allow for providing a
correlation between these magnetic properties and the fine structure
investigated at atomic scale. The Al2O3 tunnel barrier is always amorphous and
contains a large concentration of Co atoms, which, however, is significantly
reduced when using a sapphire substrate. The Co layer is polycrystalline and
shows larger grains for films grown on a sapphire substrate. The VSM
investigation reveals in-plane anisotropy only for samples grown on a sapphire
substrate. The FMR spectra of the TMJs are compared to the obtained ones with a
single Co and Co2MnGe films of identical thickness deposited on a sapphire
substrate. As expected, two distinct modes are detected in the TMJs while only
one mode is observed in each single film. For the TMJ grown on a sapphire
substrate the FMR behavior does not significantly differ from the superposition
of the individual spectra of the single films, allowing for concluding that the
exchange coupling between the two magnetic layers is too small to give rise to
observable shifts. For TMJs grown on a Si or on a MgO substrate the resonance
spectra reveal one mode which is nearly identical to the obtained one in the
single Co film, while the other observed resonance shows a considerably smaller
intensity and cannot be described using the magnetic parameters appropriate to
the single Co2MnGe film.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, Thin Solid Film