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Plane-wave theory of three-dimensional magnonic crystals

244

Citations

121

References

2008

Year

TLDR

The study examines magnonic crystals composed of ferromagnetic spheroids arranged on cubic lattices embedded in a different ferromagnetic matrix. The authors aim to determine spin‑wave spectra of three‑dimensional magnonic crystals composed of two ferromagnetic materials using the plane‑wave method. They employ the plane‑wave method to calculate spin‑wave spectra in these structures. Magnetic gaps appear only when magnetization and/or exchange contrast exceeds a lattice‑dependent threshold; fcc lattices provide the widest gaps, which scale linearly with contrast and are maximized for nearly spherical scatterers, while dipolar interactions reduce gap width only for lattice constants larger than the exchange length.

Abstract

We use the plane-wave method to determine spin-wave spectra of three-dimensional magnonic crystals (the magnetic counterpart of photonic crystals) composed of two different ferromagnetic materials. The scattering centers in the magnonic crystal considered are ferromagnetic spheroids (spheres being a special case) distributed in sites of a cubic (sc, fcc, or bcc) lattice embedded in a matrix of a different ferromagnetic material. We demonstrate that magnonic gaps in such structures occur at spontaneous magnetization contrast and/or exchange contrast values above a certain critical level, which depends on the lattice type. Optimum conditions for magnonic gaps to open are offered by the structure in which the scattering centers are the most densely packed (the fcc lattice). We show that in all three lattice types considered the reduced width of the gap (i.e., the width referred to the gap center) is, in good approximation, a linear function of both the exchange contrast and the magnetization contrast. Also, the gap width proves sensitive to scattering center deformation, and its maximum value to correspond to a scattering center shape close to a sphere. Moreover, our numerical results seem to indicate that dipolar interactions in general result in an effective reduction of the gap width, but their impact only becomes of importance when the lattice constant of the cubic magnonic structure is greater than the ferromagnetic exchange length of the matrix material.

References

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