Publication | Open Access
Strong reduction of the coercivity by a surface acoustic wave in an out-of-plane magnetized epilayer
45
Citations
24
References
2016
Year
Surface Acoustic WavesEngineeringAcoustic MetamaterialMechanical EngineeringMagnetic ResonanceStrong ReductionMagnetic MaterialsMagnetismSurface Acoustic WaveMagnetic Data StoragePhysical AcousticAcoustic MaterialMagnetohydrodynamicsSound PropagationEpitaxial GrowthMaterials ScienceMaterials EngineeringPhysicsInverse MagnetostrictionMagnetoelasticityMagnetic MaterialSpintronicsNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsOut-of-plane Magnetized EpilayerMagnetic PropertyMagnetic Device
Inverse magnetostriction is the effect by which magnetization can be changed upon application of stress/strain. A strain modulation may be created electrically by exciting interdigitated transducers to generate surface acoustic waves (SAWs). Hence SAWs appear as a possible route towards induction-free undulatory magnetic data manipulation. Here we demonstrate experimentally on an out-of-plane magnetostrictive layer a reduction of the coercive field of up to $60%$ by a SAW, over millimetric distances. A simple model shows that this spectacular effect can be partly explained by the periodic lowering of the strain-dependent domain nucleation energy by the SAW. This proof of concept was done on (Ga,Mn)(As,P), a magnetic semiconductor in which the out-of-plane magnetic anisotropy can be made very weak by epitaxial growth; it should guide material engineering for all-acoustic magnetization switching.
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