| Literature DB >> 35454506 |
Adam Krysztofik1, Nikolai Kuznetsov2, Huajun Qin2, Lukáš Flajšman2, Emerson Coy3, Sebastiaan van Dijken2.
Abstract
In this work, we investigate the structural and dynamic magnetic properties of yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films grown onto gadolinium gallium garnet (GGG) substrates with thin platinum, iridium, and gold spacer layers. Separation of the YIG film from the GGG substrate by a metal film strongly affects the crystalline structure of YIG and its magnetic damping. Despite the presence of structural defects, however, the YIG films exhibit a clear ferromagnetic resonance response. The ability to tune the magnetic damping without substantial changes to magnetization offers attractive prospects for the design of complex spin-wave conduits. We show that the insertion of a 1-nm-thick metal layer between YIG and GGG already increases the effective damping parameter enough to efficiently absorb spin waves. This bilayer structure can therefore be utilized for magnonic waveguide termination. Investigating the dispersionless propagation of spin-wave packets, we demonstrate that a damping unit consisting of the YIG/metal bilayers can dissipate incident spin-wave signals with reflection coefficient R < 0.1 at a distance comparable to the spatial width of the wave packet.Entities:
Keywords: YIG; effective damping parameter; ferromagnetic resonance; spin wave packet; spin-waves; yttrium iron garnet
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454506 PMCID: PMC9030244 DOI: 10.3390/ma15082814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1Structural properties of 40-nm-thick YIG films grown on GGG substrates with thin metal layers. (a) X-ray diffraction patterns recorded on samples with 5–7 nm metal underlayers. Note that the (222) peaks of the GGG substrate are so-called basis-forbidden reflections due to multiple diffraction [43]. Insets denoted as HR-XRD show high-resolution scans utilizing a four-crystal monochromator. The inset showing the Ir (111) reflection comes from a separate scan with a long statistical exposure. (b) SEM surface images. Insets show height-height correlation function (HHCF) as a function of lateral distance calculated on the basis of SEM contrast changes to evaluate the defect correlation length . (c) AFM topography maps.
Figure 2Broadband ferromagnetic resonance results for 40-nm-thick YIG films deposited on different metal underlayers with a nominal thickness . (a) Effective magnetization normalized to of a reference YIG film. (b) Gilbert damping parameter . (c) Inhomogeneous linewidth broadening . The inset shows calculated values of the effective damping parameter with Equation (3) for a 1-nm-thick metal layer. The color legend depicted in (a) also applies to (b,c). Values marked as reference YIG (shaded section) derive from measurements of the epitaxial film taken at the positions outside the metal wedge. (d–f) VNA spectroscopy results measured with lithographically patterned antennas for YIG (40 nm)/Au (3.0 nm)/GGG (111). (d) Color-coded reflection parameter S22 showing the FMR absorption. (e) Color-coded transmission parameter S12 for the magnetic field aligned parallel to the antennas ( 90°). (f) Color-coded angular dependence of S12 spectrum. Inset depicts in-plane magnetic field orientation with respect to the antenna geometry ( 0° for the magnetic field aligned perpendicular to the antenna edge). In figures (d–f), the real part of the scattering parameter Spq is plotted. (g,h) SNS-MOKE microscopy maps and line profiles recorded at 20 mT for YIG (40 nm)/Au (3.0 nm)/GGG (111).
Figure 3(a) Second derivative of the dispersion relation for the surface and backward volume, and the forward volume SWs. In (b, c), the ratio of the decay length to the wavelength is shown for SSW and FVSW, respectively, for different values of the SW packet spatial width . In figures (a–c), the dependencies are calculated for typical parameters of a 50-nm-thick epitaxial YIG film with saturation magnetization 140 kA/m, exchange stiffness 5.3·10−17 T∙m2, and effective damping 1·10−4. (d) Reflection coefficient as a function of the effective damping parameter in the damping unit. The inset illustrates the simulation geometry. In (e,f), the time evolution of SW packet is shown for a damping unit with 0 and 0.02, respectively. The insets show time dependences of the SW amplitude taken at 5 μm (marked with grey dashed lines). Figures (e,f) are also visualized in supplementary Videos S1 and S2.