| Literature DB >> 32009381 |
Oğuz Yıldırım1,2, Donovan Hilliard1,3, Sri Sai Phani Kanth Arekapudi3, Ciarán Fowley1, Hamza Cansever1,4, Leopold Koch3, Lakshmi Ramasubramanian1, Shengqiang Zhou1, Roman Böttger1, Jürgen Lindner1, Jürgen Faßbender1,4, Olav Hellwig1,3, Alina M Deac1.
Abstract
Interfaces separating ferromagnetic (FM) layers from non-ferromagnetic layers offer unique properties due to spin-orbit coupling and symmetry breaking, yielding effects such as exchange bias, perpendicular magnetic anisotropy, spin-pumping, spin-transfer torques, and conversion between charge and spin currents and vice versa. These interfacial phenomena play crucial roles in magnetic data storage and transfer applications, which require the formation of FM nanostructures embedded in non-ferromagnetic matrices. Here, we investigate the possibility of creating such nanostructures by ion irradiation. We study the effect of lateral confinement on the ion-irradiation-induced reduction of nonmagnetic metal oxides (e.g., antiferro- or paramagnetic) to form ferromagnetic metals. Our findings are later exploited to form three-dimensional magnetic interfaces between Co, CoO, and Pt by spatial-selective irradiation of CoO/Pt multilayers. We demonstrate that the mechanical displacement of O atoms plays a crucial role in the reduction from insulating, non-ferromagnetic cobalt oxides to metallic cobalt. Metallic cobalt yields both perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in the generated Co/Pt nanostructures and, at low temperatures, exchange bias at vertical interfaces between Co and CoO. If pushed to the limit of ion-irradiation technology, this approach could, in principle, enable the creation of densely packed, atomic-scale ferromagnetic point-contact spin-torque oscillator (STO) networks or conductive channels for current-confined-path-based current perpendicular-to-plane giant magnetoresistance read heads.Entities:
Keywords: 3D interfaces; exchange bias; ion irradiation; magnetic multilayers; perpendicular magnetic anisotropy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32009381 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b13503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229