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Strong damping-like spin-orbit torque ({tau}DL) has great potential for enabling ultrafast energy-efficient magnetic memories, oscillators, and logic. So far, the reported {tau}DL exerted on a thin-film magnet must result from an externally generated spin current or from an internal non-equilibrium spin polarization in noncentrosymmetric GaMnAs single crystals. Here, we for the first time demonstrate a very strong, unexpected {tau}DL from current flow within ferromagnetic single layers of chemically disordered, face-centered-cubic CoPt. We establish that the novel {tau}DL is a bulk effect, with the strength per unit current density increasing monotonically with the CoPt thickness, and is insensitive to the presence or absence of spin sinks at the CoPt surfaces. This {tau}DL most likely arises from a net transverse spin polarization associated with a strong spin Hall effect (SHE), while there is no detectable long-range asymmetry in the material. These results broaden the scope of spin-orbitronics and provide a novel avenue for developing single-layer-based spin-torque memory, oscillator, and logic technologies.
We report the generation and detection of spin-orbit torque ferromagnetic resonance (STFMR) in micropatterned epitaxial Fe/Pt bilayers grown by molecular beam epitaxy. The magnetic field dependent measurements at an in-plane magnetic field angle of 4
Recent discovery of spin-orbit torques (SOTs) within magnetic single-layers has attracted attention in the field of spintronics. However, it has remained elusive as to how to understand and how to tune the SOTs. Here, utilizing the single layers of c
Ferromagnetic spintronics has been a main focus as it offers non-volatile memory and logic applications through current-induced spin-transfer torques. Enabling wider applications of such magnetic devices requires a lower switching current for a small
An electric current in the presence of spin-orbit coupling can generate a spin accumulation that exerts torques on a nearby magnetization. We demonstrate that, even in the absence of materials with strong bulk spin-orbit coupling, a torque can arise
We use time-resolved (TR) measurements based on the polar magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) to study the magnetization dynamics excited by spin orbit torques in Py (Permalloy)/Pt and Ta/CoFeB bilayers. The analysis reveals that the field-like (FL) s