Session B22: Focus Session: Current Driven Magnetization Dynamics II

11:15 AM–2:15 PM, Monday, March 13, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center - 319

Sponsoring Units: GMAG FIAP DMP
Chair: Mark Stiles, National Institute of Standards and Technology

Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.B22.4

Abstract: B22.00004 : Field and Current-Driven Domain Wall Motion in Permalloy Nanowires

11:51 AM–12:27 PM

Preview Abstract

Author:

  Geoffrey Beach
    (The University of Texas at Austin)

Ferromagnetic nanowires provide a well-defined conduit for domain walls, which may be manipulated and used in a variety of information storage and processing schemes. A domain wall may be displaced by a magnetic field or by an electric current traversing the wall via spin-momentum transfer. Many experiments have focused on the depinning of a domain wall by a current, but few have addressed the subsequent propagation of a depinned wall, whether driven by current [1], field [2,3], or both. Using high-bandwidth scanning Kerr polarimetry, we have studied time-resolved motion of field and current-driven domain walls in Permalloy nanowires. Domain dynamics models predict that above a threshold field, uniform wall translation gives way to turbulent wall motion, a dynamic internal wall structure, and a substantial drop in wall mobility. We have observed this transition at an unexpectedly low field [3], suggesting that in many experiments, wall motion is far more complex than the smooth translation typically assumed. The interaction of a dc current with a propagating domain wall is likewise more complex than existing spin-torque models predict. We find a nonlinear response of the wall velocity to a dc current, with velocity enhancements approaching 40 m/s at a current density of $\sim $6$\times $10$^{11}$ A/m$^{2}$. The response may be represented by a field-independent linear term, consistent with theory, and a field-dependent nonlinear term that overtakes the linear term at moderate currents. This latter term may arise from the interaction of the current with a vortex in the wall. [1] A. Yamaguchi, \textit{et al.}, \textit{Phys. Rev. Lett.} \textbf{92}, 077205 (2004) [2] T. Ono, \textit{et al}., \textit{Science} \textbf{284}, 468 (1999); D. Atkinson, \textit{et al}., \textit{Nature Mater.} \textbf{2}, 85 (2003). [3] G. S. D. Beach, \textit{et al.}, \textit{Nature Mater.} \textbf{4}, 741 (2005)

To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.B22.4