Optimizing spin-triplet supercurrent though a ferromagnetic Josephson junction
ORAL
Abstract
Ferromagnetic Josephson junctions show promise for application to energy efficient cryogenic memory [1]. Both spin-singlet and spin-triplet supercurrents are being studied by our group for this purpose. Engineering adjacent F layers in a three-layer system to have perpendicular magnetizations allows singlet pairs to convert to spin-aligned triplet pairs. Recent work in our group exploited a synthetic antiferromagnet (SAF) with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) for the middle F layer [2]. These junctions exhibit phase control [2], but have a low critical current when compared to singlet junctions. To make the triplet junction a viable option for memory we show that removing the SAF while maintaining the PMA increases the critical current. To estimate the fraction of the supercurrent carried by spin-triplet pairs in our junctions, we also fabricate comparison junctions with the order of the F layers shuffled to suppress generation of spin-triplet pairs.
[1] I. Dayton, et al., IEEE Magn. Lett. 9, pp 1-5, (2018).
[2] J. A. Glick, et al., Science Advances 4, eaat9457 (2018).
[1] I. Dayton, et al., IEEE Magn. Lett. 9, pp 1-5, (2018).
[2] J. A. Glick, et al., Science Advances 4, eaat9457 (2018).
*This research is supported by the ODNI, IARPA, via US Army Research Office contract W911NF-14-C-0115.
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Presenters
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Victor Aguilar
- Michigan State University