| Literature DB >> 30079725 |
Inseon Oh1, Jungmin Park1, Junhyeon Jo1, Mi-Jin Jin1, Min-Sun Jang1, Ki-Suk Lee1, Jung-Woo Yoo1.
Abstract
The longitudinal spin Seebeck effects with a ferro- or ferrimagnetic insulator provide a new architecture of a thermoelectric device that could significantly improve the energy conversion efficiency. Until now, epitaxial yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films grown on gadolinium gallium garnet (GGG) substrates by a pulsed laser deposition have been most widely used for spin thermoelectric energy conversion studies. In this work, we developed a simple route to obtain a highly uniform solution-processed YIG film and used it for the on-chip microelectronic spin Seebeck characterization. We improved the film roughness down to ∼0.2 nm because the extraction of thermally induced spin voltage relies on the interfacial quality. The on-chip microelectronic device has a dimension of 200 μm long and 20 μm wide. The solution-processed 20 nm thick YIG film with a 10 nm Pt film was used for the spin Seebeck energy converter. For a temperature difference of Δ T ≈ 0.036 K applied on the thin YIG film, the obtained Δ V ≈ 28 μV, which is equivalent to SLSSE ≈ 80.4 nV/K, is close to the typical reported values for thick epitaxial YIG films. The temperature and magnetic field-dependent behaviors of spin Seebeck effects in our YIG films suggest active magnon excitations through the noncoherent precession channel. The effective SSE generation with the solution-processed thin YIG film provides versatile applications of the spin thermoelectric energy conversion.Entities:
Keywords: ferrimagnetic insulator; inverse spin Hall effect; magnon; solution process; spin Seebeck effect; yttrium iron garnet
Year: 2018 PMID: 30079725 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.8b08749
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229