Micromagnetism and magnetotransport properties of micron-sized epitaxialCr O 2 ( 100 ) wires
Author(s) -
C. König,
M. Fonin,
M. Laufenberg,
A. Biehler,
W. Bührer,
Mathias Kläui,
U. Rüdiger,
G. Güntherodt
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
physical review b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1538-4489
pISSN - 1098-0121
DOI - 10.1103/physrevb.75.144428
Subject(s) - condensed matter physics , magnetoresistance , magnetization , magnetocrystalline anisotropy , anisotropy , domain wall (magnetism) , magnetic anisotropy , orientation (vector space) , materials science , magnetic domain , epitaxy , physics , field (mathematics) , domain (mathematical analysis) , ferromagnetism , magnetic field , geometry , nanotechnology , optics , quantum mechanics , mathematical analysis , mathematics , layer (electronics) , pure mathematics
We report a detailed study of the magnetic domain configurations and the magnetization reversal in epitaxial CrO2100 wires 0.5– 5 m widths patterned along different crystallographic directions. Magnetic force microscopy imaging in zero field reveals single domain states for wires fabricated along the magnetic easy axis, while wires perpendicular to the magnetic easy axis exhibit a stripe domain configuration. The behavior in an applied field and the switching of the magnetization is probed by magnetoresistance MR measurements. Depending on the orientation of the wire with respect to the easy and hard magnetocrystalline anisotropy axes and the field direction, distinctly different reversal modes are observed including inhomogeneous magnetization configurations. These modes and configurations can be explained taking into account the interplay between the different anisotropy terms. MR measurements at variable temperatures demonstrate that the low temperature MR response is dominated by intergrain-tunneling magnetoresistance, while at elevated temperatures it is superseded by the anisotropic MR.
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