ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Use of a spin polarized current for the manipulation of magnetic domain walls in ferromagnetic nanowires has been the subject of intensive research for many years. Recently, due to technological advancements, creating nano-contacts with special characteristics is becoming more and more prevalent. We now present a full quantum investigation of the magnetoresistance and the spin transfer torque in a domain wall, which is embedded in a nano-contact of Ni$_{80}$Fe$_ {20}$, where the size of the domain wall becomes a relevant tunable parameter. The dependence on the domain wall width as well as the spatial dependence of the torque along the domain wall can be analyzed in complete detail. The magnetoresistance drops with increasing domain wall width as expected, but also shows characteristic modulations and points of resonant spin-flip transmission. The spin transfer torque has both significant in-plane and out-of-plane contributions even without considering relaxation. A closer inspection identifies contributions from the misalignment of the spin density for short domain walls as well as an effective gauge field for longer domain walls, both of which oscillate along the domain wall.
The spin-transfer-torque-driven (STT-driven) dynamics of a domain wall in an easy-axis rare-earth transition-metal ferrimagnet is investigated theoretically and numerically in the vicinity of the angular momentum compensation point $T_A$, where the n
Ferromagnetic spin-valves and tunneling junctions are crucial for spintronics applications and are one of the most fundamental spintronics devices. Motivated by the potential unique advantages of antiferromagnets for spintronics, we theoretically stu
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 in
Spin-dependent transport phenomena due to relativistic spin-orbit coupling and broken space-inversion symmetry are often difficult to interpret microscopically, in particular when occurring at surfaces or interfaces. Here we present a theoretical and
A large unidirectional magnetoresistance (UMR) ratio of UMR/$R_{xx}sim$ $0.36%$ is found in W/CoFeB metallic bilayer heterostructures at room temperature. Three different regimes in terms of the current dependence of UMR ratio are identified: A spin-