ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

After the application of an ultrashort laser pulse, the antiferromagnetic alignment in rare earth-transition metal alloys can temporarily become ferromagnetic with the rare-earth polarity. Proposed models merely describe this effect, without showin g the route for its manipulation. Here we use extensive atomistic spin model simulations and micromagnetic theory for ferrimagnets at elevated temperatures to predict that the polarity of this transient ferromagnetic-like state can be controlled by initial temperature. We show that this arises because the magnetic response of each lattice has a different temperature dependence, at low temperatures the transition metal responds faster than the rare earth, while at high temperatures this role is interchanged. Our findings contribute to the physical understanding and control of this state and thus open new perspectives for its use in ultrafast magnetic devices.
99 - U. Atxitia , P. Nieves , 2012
We derive the Landau-Lifshitz-Bloch (LLB) equation for a two-component magnetic system valid up to the Curie temperature. As an example, we consider disordered GdFeCo ferrimagnet where the ultrafast optically induced magnetization switching under the action of heat alone has been recently reported. The two-component LLB equation contains the longitudinal relaxation terms responding to the exchange fields from the proper and the neighboring sublattices. We show that the sign of the longitudinal relaxation rate at high temperatures can change depending on the dynamical magnetization value and a dynamical polarisation of one material by another can occur. We discuss the differences between the LLB and the Baryakhtar equation, recently used to explain the ultrafast switching in ferrimagnets. The two-component LLB equation forms basis for the largescale micromagnetic modeling of nanostructures at high temperatures and ultrashort timescales.
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا