| Literature DB >> 28706290 |
Peng Gou1, Jie Qian1, Fuchun Xi1, Yuexin Zou1, Jun Cao1, Haochi Yu1, Ziyi Zhao1, Le Yang1, Jie Xu1, Hengliang Wang1, Lijian Zhang1, Zhenghua An2,3.
Abstract
The applications of spin dynamos, which could potentially power complex nanoscopic devices, have so far been limited owing to their extremely low energy conversion efficiencies. Here, we present a unique plasmonic diabolo cavity (PDC) that dramatically improves the spin rectification signal (enhancement of more than three orders of magnitude) under microwave excitation; further, it enables an energy conversion efficiency of up to ~0.69 mV/mW, compared with ~0.27 μV/mW without a PDC. This remarkable improvement arises from the simultaneous enhancement of the microwave electric field (~13-fold) and the magnetic field (~195-fold), which cooperate in the spin precession process generates photovoltage (PV) efficiently under ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) conditions. The interplay of the microwave electromagnetic resonance and the ferromagnetic resonance originates from a hybridized mode based on the plasmonic resonance of the diabolo structure and Fabry-Perot-like modes in the PDC. Our work sheds light on how more efficient spin dynamo devices for practical applications could be realized and paves the way for future studies utilizing both artificial and natural magnetism for applications in many disciplines, such as for the design of future efficient wireless energy conversion devices, high frequent resonant spintronic devices, and magnonic metamaterials.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28706290 PMCID: PMC5509722 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-05634-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic structure of the plasmonic diabolo cavity (PDC) and the simulation results. (a) Actual sample in our experiment, where the thickness of the cavity, S, was tunable. Typical dimension of MDA: L = 3 mm, w = 0.2 mm, and g = 0.5 mm. (b) Schematic diagram of the PDC, which contains three parts: the MDA structure on the PET, the spin dynamo device on the glass substrate, and the flat Al foil. Insert is the magnified image of spin dynamo, with a dimension: l = 600 μm and w = 20 μm. Panel (c) shows the enhancement of the product of the electric and magnetic field (e h ) on the x–z plane.
Figure 2Experimental results. Panels (a)–(c) successively show the two-dimensional PV spectrum as a function of the external magnetic field and microwave frequency for three configurations: PDC, MDA, and bare. The red dashed lines indicate the calculated FMR frequency using Kittel’s formula . (d) The amplitude of microwave photovoltage (A ) as a function of frequency. (e) The change of the sample’s resistance under microwave (9.4 GHz) irradiation with a period of 42 s (width 21 s) at 23 dBm with different configurations (PDC: green solid triangles; MDA: blue solid squares; and bare: red solid circles).
Figure 3Line shapes of PV and Lorentzian and dispersive amplitudes for three structures. Panels (a)–(c) show the measured microwave PV line shapes for the PDC, MDA, and bare structures (at 9.4 GHz), respectively. Panels (d)–(f) show A , A and A with respect to θ.
Figure 4FP-like mode and visual theory. (a) Plot of the PV as a function of microwave frequency (8–12 GHz) and cavity thickness (2–18 mm). (b) The thickness (S) of the cavity corresponding to the orders (N) of the cavity mode in our photonic-like resonant mode.