Ultralow Damping in Nanometer-Thick Epitaxial Spinel Ferrite Thin Films
Author(s) -
Satoru Emori,
Di Yi,
Sam Crossley,
Jacob J. Wisser,
Purnima P. Balakrishnan,
Behrouz Khodadadi,
Padraic Shafer,
Christoph Klewe,
Alpha T. N’Diaye,
Brittany Urwin,
K. Mahalingam,
Brandon M. Howe,
Harold Y. Hwang,
Elke Arenholz,
Y. Suzuki
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b01261
Subject(s) - materials science , condensed matter physics , thin film , spintronics , magnetic damping , spinel , ferrite (magnet) , angular momentum , laser linewidth , magnetization dynamics , optoelectronics , magnetization , nanotechnology , magnetic field , composite material , ferromagnetism , optics , physics , metallurgy , laser , quantum mechanics , vibration
Pure spin currents, unaccompanied by dissipative charge flow, are essential for realizing energy-efficient nanomagnetic information and communications devices. Thin-film magnetic insulators have been identified as promising materials for spin-current technology because they are thought to exhibit lower damping compared with their metallic counterparts. However, insulating behavior is not a sufficient requirement for low damping, as evidenced by the very limited options for low-damping insulators. Here, we demonstrate a new class of nanometer-thick ultralow-damping insulating thin films based on design criteria that minimize orbital angular momentum and structural disorder. Specifically, we show ultralow damping in <20 nm thick spinel-structure magnesium aluminum ferrite (MAFO), in which magnetization arises from Fe 3+ ions with zero orbital angular momentum. These epitaxial MAFO thin films exhibit a Gilbert damping parameter of ∼0.0015 and negligible inhomogeneous linewidth broadening, resulting in narrow half width at half-maximum linewidths of ∼0.6 mT around 10 GHz. Our findings offer an attractive thin-film platform for enabling integrated insulating spintronics.
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