Resolution-dependent mechanisms for bimodal switching time distributions in simulated Fe nanopillars

ORAL

Abstract

Numerical simulations of magnetization reversals of iron nanopillars in off-axis applied fields at different lattice resolutions reveal bimodal distributions in the switching times (first-passage times through $0$ of the longitudinal magnetization, $M_{\mathrm{z}}$). We show that the mechanisms responsible for these distributions are resolution-dependent. The highest-resolution model, in which the computational cell is smaller than the exchange length, is three-dimensional. Here, the bimodal distribution results from a reversal process in which the pillar sometimes avoids a metastable free-energy well. At medium resolution, the pillar is modeled as a $1$-D stack of spins. The bimodal distribution then reflects whether the reversal starts from one or both ends. Finally, for a low-resolution model in the form of a single spin with an anisotropic potential, the bimodal distribution is an artifact of the definition of a switching event: the result of the spin precessing close to $M_{\mathrm{z}}$~$=0$. While the zero- and one-dimensional models display bimodal switching-time distributions, the mechanisms are different than for the three-dimensional model. Only the latter captures the mechanism that is most interesting from an experimental and device-application point of view.

*Supported by NSF grant DMR-0444051.

Authors

  • S.H. Thompson

    • Florida State U.
  • G. Brown

    • Florida State U.
  • P.A. Rikvold

    • Florida State University
    • Florida State U.
  • M.A. Novotny

    • Physics and HPC2 Center for Computational Sciences, Mississippi State University
    • Mississippi State University
    • Mississippi State U.