42,133 research outputs found
Domain wall propagation due to the synchronization with circularly polarized microwaves
Finding a new control parameter for magnetic domain wall (DW) motion in
magnetic nanostructures is important in general and in particular for the
spintronics applications. Here, we show that a circularly polarized magnetic
field (CPMF) at GHz frequency (microwave) can efficiently drive a DW to
propagate along a magnetic nanowire. Two motion modes are identified: rigid-DW
propagation at low frequency and oscillatory propagation at high frequency.
Moreover, DW motion under a CPMF is equivalent to the DW motion under a uniform
spin current in the current perpendicular to the plane magnetic configuration
proposed recently by Khvalkovskiy et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 067206 (2009)],
and the CPMF frequency plays the role of the current
Thermoelectric properties of Ba-Cu-Si clathrates
Thermoelectric properties of the type-I clathrates BaCuSi
(, = nominal Cu content) are investigated both
experimentally and theoretically. The polycrystalline samples are prepared
either by melting, ball milling and hot pressing or by melt spinning, hand
milling and hot pressing techniques. Temperature-dependent electrical
resistivity, , and the Seebeck coefficient, , measurements
reveal metal-like behavior for all samples. For and 6, density
functional theory calculations are performed for deriving the enthalpy of
formation and the electronic structure which is exploited for the calculation
of Seebeck coefficients and conductivity within Boltzmann's transport theory.
For simulating the properties of doped clathrates the rigid band model is
applied. On the basis of the density functional theory results the
experimentally observed compositional dependence of and of the
whole sample series is analyzed. The highest dimensionless thermoelectric
figure of merit of 0.28 is reached for a melt-spun sample at
C. The relatively low values in this system are attributed to
the too high charge carrier concentrations.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Optimal time-dependent polarized current pattern for fast domain wall propagation in nanowires: Exact solutions for biaxial and uniaxial anisotropies
One of the important issues in nanomagnetism is to lower the current needed
for a technologically useful domain wall (DW) propagation speed. Based on the
modified Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG) equation with both Slonczewski
spin-transfer torque and the field-like torque, we derive the optimal spin
current pattern for fast DW propagation along nanowires. Under such conditions,
the DW velocity in biaxial wires can be enhanced as much as ten times compared
to the velocities achieved in experiments so far. Moreover, the fast variation
of spin polarization can help DW depinning. Possible experimental realizations
are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Geochemistry and petrogenesis of volcanic rocks from Daimao Seamount (South China Sea) and their tectonic implications
The South China Sea (SCS) experienced three episodes of seafloor spreading and left three fossil spreading centers presently located at 18°N, 17°N and 15.5°N. Spreading ceased at these three locations during magnetic anomaly 10, 8, and 5c, respectively. Daimao Seamount (16.6. Ma) was formed 10. my after the cessation of the 17°N spreading center. Volcaniclastic rocks and shallow-water carbonate facies near the summit of Daimao Seamount provide key information on the seamount's geologic history. New major and trace element and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions of basaltic breccia clasts in the volcaniclastics suggest that Daimao and other SCS seamounts have typical ocean island basalt-like composition and possess a 'Dupal' isotopic signature. Our new analyses, combined with available data, indicate that the basaltic foundation of Daimao Seamount was formed through subaqueous explosive volcanic eruptions at 16.6. Ma. The seamount subsided rapidly (>. 0.12. mm/y) at first, allowing the deposition of shallow-water, coral-bearing carbonates around its summit and, then, at a slower rate (<. 0.12. mm/y). We propose that the parental magmas of SCS seamount lavas originated from the Hainan mantle plume. In contrast, lavas from contemporaneous seamounts in other marginal basins in the western Pacific are subduction-related
Domain wall propagation through spin wave emission
We theoretically study field-induced domain wall (DW) motion in an
electrically insulating ferromagnet with hard- and easy-axis anisotropies. DWs
can propagate along a dissipationless wire through spin wave emission locked
into the known soliton velocity at low fields. In the presence of damping, the
mode appears before the Walker breakdown field for strong out-of-plane magnetic
anisotropy, and the usual Walker rigid-body propagation mode becomes unstable
when the field is between the maximal-DW-speed field and Walker breakdown
field.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Spin transfer torque enhancement in dual spin valve in the ballistic regime
The spin transfer torque in all-metal dual spin valve, in which two
antiparallelly aligned pinned ferromagnetic layers are on the two sides of a
free ferromagnetic layer with two thin nonmagnetic spacers in between, is
studied in the ballistic regime. It is argued that, similar to the results in
the diffusion regime, the spin transfer torque is dramatically enhanced in
comparison to that in a conventional spin valve although no spin accumulation
exists at the magnetic-nonmagnetic interfaces. Within the Slonczewski's
approach, an analytical expression of the torque on the free magnetic layer is
obtained, which may serve as a theoretical model for the micromagnetic
simulation of the spin dynamics in dual spin valve. Depending on the
orientation of free layer and the degree of electron polarization, the spin
transfer torque enhancement could be tens times. The general cases when
transmission and reflection probabilities of free layer are different from zero
or one are also numerically calculated.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Euler equation of the optimal trajectory for the fastest magnetization reversal of nano-magnetic structures
Based on the modified Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation for an arbitrary
Stoner particle under an external magnetic field and a spin-polarized electric
current, differential equations for the optimal reversal trajectory, along
which the magnetization reversal is the fastest one among all possible reversal
routes, are obtained. We show that this is a Euler-Lagrange problem with
constrains. The Euler equation of the optimal trajectory is useful in designing
a magnetic field pulse and/or a polarized electric current pulse in
magnetization reversal for two reasons. 1) It is straightforward to obtain the
solution of the Euler equation, at least numerically, for a given magnetic
nano-structure characterized by its magnetic anisotropy energy. 2) After
obtaining the optimal reversal trajectory for a given magnetic nano-structure,
finding a proper field/current pulse is an algebraic problem instead of the
original nonlinear differential equation
Using ultrashort optical pulses to couple ferroelectric and ferromagnetic order in an oxide heterostructure
A new approach to all-optical detection and control of the coupling between
electric and magnetic order on ultrafast timescales is achieved using
time-resolved second harmonic generation (SHG) to study a ferroelectric
(FE)/ferromagnet (FM) oxide heterostructure. We use femtosecond optical pulses
to modify the spin alignment in a
BaSrTiO(BSTO)/LaCaMnO (LCMO)
heterostructure and selectively probe the ferroelectric response using SHG. In
this heterostructure, the pump pulses photoexcite non-equilibrium
quasiparticles in LCMO, which rapidly interact with phonons before undergoing
spin-lattice relaxation on a timescale of tens of picoseconds. This reduces the
spin-spin interactions in LCMO, applying stress on BSTO through
magnetostriction. This then modifies the FE polarization through the
piezoelectric effect, on a timescale much faster than laser-induced heat
diffusion from LCMO to BSTO. We have thus demonstrated an ultrafast indirect
magnetoelectric effect in a FE/FM heterostructure mediated through elastic
coupling, with a timescale primarily governed by spin-lattice relaxation in the
FM layer
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