Low-Damping Vertically Graded Ferromagnetic Films

ORAL

Abstract

Recent studies indicate that ~10-nm-thick ferromagnetic films with vertical compositional gradients can produce strong spin-orbit torques (SOTs). Such graded films are of technological interest since they are more thermally stable than ultrathin magnetic films in typical SOT devices. An important unanswered question is whether graded magnetic films can possess low damping, which is vital for minimizing the input power for precessional SOT devices.

We show that vertically graded ferromagnetic films exhibit low effective damping, comparable to homogeneous films of low-damping Co25Fe75[1] and Fe80V20[2]. Vertically graded films (thickness ~10 nm) of polycrystalline Co25Fe75-Fe80V20 were grown by continuously tuning the sputtering powers on Co25Fe75 and Fe80V20 targets. The FMR linewidths of graded Co25Fe75-Fe80V20 films are only <25% greater than those of homogeneous Co25Fe75. Thus, we find that the intentional inhomogeneity in the graded films does not lead to large linewidth broadening. Our results demonstrate vertically graded ferromagnetic films as promising candidates for power-efficient SOT devices.

 

[1] M. A. W. Schoen, et al. Nat. Phys. 12, 839 (2016)

[2] D. A. Smith, et al. Phys. Rev. Appl. 14, 034042 (2020)

*Virginia Tech College of Science Dean's Discovery Fund

Presenters

  • Rachel Maizel

    • Virginia Polytechnic and State University

Authors

  • Rachel Maizel

    • Virginia Polytechnic and State University
  • Youngmin Lim

    • Virginia Tech
  • Shuang Wu

    • Virginia Tech
  • David A Smith

    • Virginia Tech
  • Adbhut Gupta

    • Virginia Tech
  • Jean J Heremans

    • Virginia Tech
  • Satoru Emori

    • Virginia Tech