There is growing interest in exploring nanomagnetic devices as potential replacements for electronic devices (e.g. transistors) in digital switching circuits and systems. A special class of nanomagnetic devices are switched with electrically generated mechanical strain leading to electrical control of magnetism. Straintronic magneto-tunneling junctions (s-MTJ) belong to this category. Their soft layers are composed of two-phase multiferroics comprising a magnetostrictive layer elastically coupled to a piezoelectric layer.Here, we show that a single straintronic magneto-tunneling junction with a passive resistor can act as a microwave oscillator whose traditional implementation would have required microwave operational amplifiers, capacitors and resistors. This reduces device footprint and cost, while improving device reliability. This is an analog application of magnetic devices where magnetic interactions (interaction between the shape anisotropy, strain anisotropy, dipolar coupling field and spin transfer torque in the soft layer of the s-MTJ) are exploited to implement an oscillator with reduced footprint.
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Antennas typically have emission/radiation efficiencies bounded by A/λ2(A < λ2) where A is the emitting area and λ is the emitted wavelength. That makes it challenging to miniaturize antennas to extreme subwavelength dimensions without severely compromising their efficiencies. To overcome this challenge, an electromagnetic (EM) antenna is actuated with a surface acoustic wave (SAW) whose wavelength is about five orders of magnitude smaller than the EM wavelength at the same frequency. This allows to implement an extreme subwavelength EM antenna, radiating an EM wave of wavelength λ = 2 m, whose emitting area is ≈10−8 m2 (A/λ2 = 2.5 × 10−9), and whose measured radiation efficiency exceeds the A/λ2 limit by over 105. The antenna consists of magnetostrictive nanomagnets deposited on a piezoelectric substrate. A SAW launched in the substrate with an alternating electrical voltage periodically strains the nanomagnets and rotates their magnetizations owing to the Villari effect. The oscillating magnetizations emit EM waves at the frequency of the SAW. These extreme subwavelength antennas that radiate with efficiencies a few orders of magnitude larger than the A/λ2 limit allow drastic miniaturization of communication systems.
Using time-resolved magneto optical Kerr effect (TR-MOKE) microscopy, we demonstrate surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) induced resonant amplification of intrinsic spin-wave (SW) modes, as well as generation of new extrinsic or driven modes...
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