Publication | Open Access
Influence of yttrium iron garnet thickness and heater opacity on the nonlocal transport of electrically and thermally excited magnons
85
Citations
45
References
2016
Year
EngineeringMagnetic ResonanceMagnonicsInjected MagnonsMagnetoresistanceHeater OpacityMagnetismExcited MagnonsOptical PropertiesQuantum MaterialsMagnetohydrodynamicsMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringPhysicsGenerated MagnonsNonlocal TransportMagnetic MaterialQuantum MagnetismSpintronicsFerromagnetismNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMagnetic Property
We studied the nonlocal transport behavior of both electrically and thermally excited magnons in yttrium iron garnet (YIG) as a function of its thickness. For electrically injected magnons, the nonlocal signals decrease monotonically as the YIG thickness increases. For the nonlocal behavior of the thermally generated magnons, or the nonlocal spin Seebeck effect (SSE), we observed a sign reversal which occurs at a certain heater-detector distance, and it is influenced by both the opacity of the YIG/heater interface and the YIG thickness. Our nonlocal SSE results can be qualitatively explained by the bulk-driven SSE mechanism together with the magnon diffusion model. Using a two-dimensional finite element model (2D-FEM), we estimated the bulk spin Seebeck coefficient of YIG at room temperature. The quantitative disagreement between the experimental and modeled results indicates more complex processes going on in addition to magnon diffusion and relaxation, especially close to the contacts.
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