With the advent of pure-spin-current sources, spin-based electronic (spintronic) devices no longer require electrical charge transfer, opening new possibilities for both conducting and insulating spintronic systems. Pure spin currents have been used to suppress noise caused by thermal fluctuations in magnetic nanodevices, amplify propagating magnetization waves, and to reduce the dynamic damping in magnetic films. However, generation of coherent auto-oscillations by pure spin currents has not been achieved so far. Here we demonstrate the generation of single-mode coherent auto-oscillations in a device that combines local injection of a pure spin current with enhanced spin-wave radiation losses. Counterintuitively, radiation losses enable excitation of auto-oscillation, suppressing the nonlinear processes that prevent auto-oscillation by redistributing the energy between different modes. Our devices exhibit auto-oscillations at moderate current densities, at a microwave frequency tunable over a wide range. These findings suggest a new route for the implementation of nanoscale microwave sources for next-generation integrated electronics.
We study current-driven magnetization switching in nanofabricated Ni(84)Fe(16)/Cu/Ni(84)Fe16 trilayers at 295 and 4.2 K. The shape of the hysteretic switching diagram at low magnetic field changes with temperature. The reversible behavior at higher fields involves two phenomena, a threshold current for magnetic excitations closely correlated with the switching current, and a peak in differential resistance characterized by telegraph noise, with an average period that decreases exponentially with current and shifts with temperature. We interpret both static and dynamic results at 295 and 4.2 K in terms of thermal activation over a potential barrier, with a current-dependent effective magnetic temperature.
A complete interpretation is proposed for the pre-edge fine structure (PEFS) of the x-ray Ti K-absorption spectra for perovskite structure crystals. The interpretation is based on the results of numerous calculations performed by a modified full multiple scattering method which provides the theoretical spectra for the 3d transition metal oxides in fair agreement with experiment. It is shown that the three main peaks in the PEFS have quite different origin. The first long-wave side peak A is caused mainly by quadrupole transitions. The middle peak B is caused by the p-d mixture effect and the high intensity of it is considered to be a qualitative spectroscopic indication of ferroelectricity in the perovskite structure crystal. A simple formula is obtained which expresses the area under peak B through the lattice constants and mean-square displacement of the absorbing Ti atom from the instantaneous centre of the coordination polyhedron. The peak B area averaged over thermal atomic vibrations is determined by the three-particle atomic distribution function. The short-wave side peak C is caused by the Ti 1s electron transition to the unoccupied 3d states of the neighbouring transition metal atoms. We show that an additional peak on the short-wave side of peak C occurs if there are 4d atoms (for instance Zr atoms in the vicinity of the absorbing Ti atom in the (PZT) solid solution) within the oxygen atom octahedrons surrounding the absorbing 3d atom. The area under peak is directly determined by the average number of 4d atoms in the vicinity of the absorbing Ti one.
We utilized microwave spectroscopy to study the magnetization oscillations locally induced in a Permalloy film by a pure spin current, which is generated due to the spin Hall effect in an adjacent Pt layer. The oscillation frequency is lower than the ferromagnetic resonance of Permalloy, indicating that the oscillation forms a self-localized nonpropagating spin-wave soliton. At cryogenic temperatures, the spectral characteristics are remarkably similar to the traditional spin-torque nano-oscillators driven by spin-polarized currents. However, the linewidth of the oscillation increases exponentially with temperature and an additional peak appears in the spectrum below the ferromagnetic resonance, suggesting that the spectral characteristics are determined by interplay between two localized dynamical states.
Dynamics induced by spin-transfer torque is a quickly developing topic in modern magnetism, which has initiated several new approaches to magnetic nanodevices. It is now well established that a spin-polarized electric current injected into a ferromagnetic layer through a nanocontact exerts a torque on the magnetization, leading to microwave-frequency precession detectable through the magnetoresistance effect. This phenomenon provides a way for the realization of tunable nanometre-size microwave oscillators, the so-called spin-torque nano-oscillators (STNOs). Present theories of STNOs are mainly based on pioneering works predicting emission of spin waves due to the spin torque. Despite intense experimental studies, until now this spin-wave emission has not been observed. Here, we report the first experimental observation and two-dimensional mapping of spin waves emitted by STNOs. We demonstrate that the emission is strongly directional, and the direction of the spin-wave propagation is steerable by the magnetic field. The information about the emitted spin waves obtained in our measurements is of key importance for the understanding of the physics of STNOs, and for the implementation of coupling between individual oscillators mediated by spin waves. Analysis shows that the observed directional emission is a general property inherent to any dynamical system with strongly anisotropic dispersion.
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