Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Thermally induced spin torque and domain wall motion in superconductor/antiferromagnetic insulator bilayers

81   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Grigorii Bobkov A.
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

We theoretically investigate domain wall motion in an antiferromagnetic insulator layer caused by thermally generated spin currents in an adjacent spin-split superconductor layer. An uncompensated antiferromagnet interface enables the two crucial ingredients underlying the mechanism - spin splitting in the superconductor and absorption of spin currents by the antiferromagnet. Treating the superconductor using the quasiclassical theory and the antiferromagnet via Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert description, we find domain wall propagation along the thermal gradient with relatively large velocities $sim 100$ m/s. Our proposal exploits the giant thermal response of spin-split superconductors in achieving large spin torques towards driving domain wall and other spin textures in antiferromagnets.



rate research

Read More

Deterministic control of domain walls orthogonal to the direction of current flow is demonstrated by exploiting spin orbit torque in a perpendicularly polarized Ta/CoFeB/MgO multilayer in presence of an in-plane magnetic field. Notably, such orthogonal motion with respect to current flow is not possible from traditional spin transfer torque driven domain wall propagation even in presence of an external magnetic field. Reversing the polarity of either the current flow or the in-plane field is found to reverse the direction of the domain wall motion. From these measurements, which are unaffected by any conventional spin transfer torque by symmetry, we estimate the spin orbit torque efficiency of Ta to be 0.08.
We report large enhancement of thermally injected spin current in normal metal (NM)/antiferromagnet(AF)/yttrium iron garnet(YIG), where a thin AF insulating layer of NiO or CoO can enhance spin current from YIG to a NM by up to a factor of 10. The spin current enhancement in NM/AF/YIG, with a pronounced maximum near the Neel temperature of the thin AF layer, has been found to scale linearly with the spin-mixing conductance at the NM/YIG interface for NM = 3d, 4d, and 5d metals. Calculations of spin current enhancement and spin mixing conductance are qualitatively consistent with the experimental results.
The superconducting critical temperature $T_C$ of a superconductor/ferromagnet (S/F) bilayer with spin-flip scatterings at the interface is calculated as a function of the ferromagnet thickness $d_F$ in the dirty limit employing the Usadel equation. The appropriate boundary conditions from the spin-flip scatterings at the S/F interface are derived for the Usadel equation which includes the spin triplet pairing components as well as the spin singlet one. The spin-flip processes induce the spin triplet pairing components with s-wave in momentum and odd symmetry in frequency from the s-wave singlet order parameter $Delta$ of the superconductor region. The induced triplet components alter the singlet order parameter in the superconductor through boundary conditions at the interface and, consequently, change the $T_C$ of an S/F bilayer system. The calculated $T_C(d_F)$, like the case of no spin-flips, shows non-monotonic behavior which typically decreases as $d_F$ is increased from 0 and shows a shallow minimum and then saturates slowly as $d_F$ is further increased. It is well established that as the interface resistance (parameterized in terms of $gamma_b$) is increased, the $T_C$ is increased for a given $d_F$ and the non-monotonic feature in $T_C(d_F)$ is strongly suppressed. As the spin flip scattering (parameterized in terms of $gamma_m$) is increased, on the other hand, the $T_C$ is also increased for a given $d_F$, but the non-monotonic feature in $T_C(d_F)$ is less suppressed or even enhanced, through the formation of the spin triplet components.
We demonstrate optical manipulation of the position of a domain wall in a dilute magnetic semiconductor, GaMnAsP. Two main contributions are identified. Firstly, photocarrier spin exerts a spin transfer torque on the magnetization via the exchange interaction. The direction of the domain wall motion can be controlled using the helicity of the laser. Secondly, the domain wall is attracted to the hot-spot generated by the focused laser. Unlike magnetic field driven domain wall depinning, these mechanisms directly drive domain wall motion, providing an optical tweezer like ability to position and locally probe domain walls.
A ferromagnetic insulator (FI) attached to a conventional superconductor (S) changes drastically the properties of the latter. Specifically, the exchange field at the FI/S interface leads to a splitting of the superconducting density of states. If S is a superconducting film, thinner than the superconducting coherence length, the modification of the density of states occurs over the whole sample. The co-existence of the exchange splitting and superconducting correlations in S/FI structures leads to striking transport phenomena that are of interest for applications in thermoelectricity, superconducting spintronics and radiation sensors. Here we review the most recent progress in understanding the transport properties of FI/S structures by presenting a complete theoretical framework based on the quasiclassical kinetic equations. We discuss the coupling between the electronic degrees of freedom, charge, spin and energy, under non-equilibrium conditions and its manifestation in thermoelectricity and spin-dependent transport.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا