| Literature DB >> 25232291 |
Michał Matczak1, Bogdan Szymański2, Piotr Kuświk2, Maciej Urbaniak2, Feliks Stobiecki1, Zbigniew Kurant3, Andrzej Maziewski3, Daniel Lengemann4, Arno Ehresmann4.
Abstract
Graded anisotropy magnetic materials possess a coercive field changing laterally with position. A simple fabrication procedure to produce such an anisotropy gradient in a polycrystalline Au/Co layer system without lateral thickness variation and with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy, prototypical for a large variety of thin film systems, is shown. The procedure uses light-ion bombardment without the use of a mask. Magnetization reversal in this polycrystalline layer system takes place by unidirectional movement of a single domain wall only in regions with larger anisotropies and anisotropy gradients. In this anisotropy/anisotropy gradient regime, the domain wall is oriented perpendicular to the coercive field gradient, and it can be positioned along the gradient by an appropriate magnetic field pulse. For smaller anisotropies/anisotropy gradients, the natural anisotropy fluctuations of the polycrystalline layer system induce magnetization reversal dominated by domain nucleation. PACS: 75.30.Gw; 75.70.Cn; 75.60.Ch.Entities:
Keywords: Domain walls; Ion bombardment; Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25232291 PMCID: PMC4155390 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-9-395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Fabrication of the monotonically varying ion fluence with defined ion beam profile. (a) Sketch of the ion bombardment procedure for constant fluence gradient along the x-direction. The cumulative fluence F versus x position after six tracks of an ion beam with the idealized rectangular intensity cross-section (dashed line) and the experimental intensity cross-section (solid line) of the beam profile shown in (b). The ‘wavy’ edges of the beam intensity at x ≈ 0.5 and 2.5 are artifacts caused by measurement procedure (in which a Faraday cup with an opening of 0.1-mm diameter scans the beam along the x-direction).
Figure 2The influence of ion bombardment with different fluences on coercive field. (a) Representative hysteresis loops for stripe 1 taken along the x-axis. HC as a function of the x-coordinate (b) and as a function of F(c) (full circles - stripe 1, open circles - stripe 2). Note that the fluence gradient and coercive field gradient have opposite signs.
Figure 3Domain wall propagation for two different coercive field gradients. Propagation of the DW in the region with small (a) and high (b) coercive field gradient, i.e., for areas A and B marked in Figure 4, respectively. (c) Positions of the DW [xDW(Hext) − xDW(Href = 21.9 kA/m)] and [yDW(Hext) − yDW(Href = 21.9 kA/m)] relative to its position for a reference field pulse of 21.9 kA/m as a function of field pulse amplitude Hext. The scales in (a) and (b) are the same.
Figure 4P-MOKE images of the domain structure with coercive field gradient. Domain structure of a representative area of the sample (a part of stripe 1) recorded after a field pulse of 21.9 and 29.8 kA/m for panels (a) and (b), respectively. The evolution of DW positions in marked areas A and B is discussed with Figure 3.