Back to Search Start Over

Printing Nearly-Discrete Magnetic Patterns Using Chemical Disorder Induced Ferromagnetism

Authors :
Jürgen Bauch
Falk Meutzner
Richard Boucher
Stefan Facsko
Sebastian Wintz
Ahmet Unal
Sergio Valencia
Rantej Bali
Jürgen Fassbender
René Hübner
Jürgen Lindner
Andreas Neudert
Florian Kronast
Kay Potzger
Source :
Nano Letters. 14:435-441
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2014.

Abstract

Ferromagnetism in certain alloys consisting of magnetic and nonmagnetic species can be activated by the presence of chemical disorder. This phenomenon is linked to an increase in the number of nearest-neighbor magnetic atoms and local variations in the electronic band structure due to the existence of disorder sites. An approach to induce disorder is through exposure of the chemically ordered alloy to energetic ions; collision cascades formed by the ions knock atoms from their ordered sites and the concomitant vacancies are filled randomly via thermal diffusion of atoms at room temperature. The ordered structure thereby undergoes a transition into a metastable solid solution. Here we demonstrate the patterning of highly resolved magnetic structures by taking advantage of the large increase in the saturation magnetization of Fe60Al40 alloy triggered by subtle atomic displacements. The sigmoidal characteristic and sensitive dependence of the induced magnetization on the atomic displacements manifests a sub-50 nm patterning resolution. Patterning of magnetic regions in the form of stripes separated by ∼ 40 nm wide spacers was performed, wherein the magnet/spacer/magnet structure exhibits reprogrammable parallel (↑/spacer/↑) and antiparallel (↑/spacer/↓) magnetization configurations in zero field. Materials in which the magnetic behavior can be tuned via ion-induced phase transitions may allow the fabrication of novel spin-transport and memory devices using existing lateral patterning tools.

Details

ISSN :
15306992 and 15306984
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nano Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ca0fe8cd34f4036ce04e3d0c4ca71329
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/nl404521c