APS March Meeting 2012
Volume 57, Number 1
Monday–Friday, February 27–March 2 2012;
Boston, Massachusetts
Session D15: Focus Session: Spins in Metals - Ultra Fast Dynamics
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, February 27, 2012
Room: 213
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP FIAP GMAG
Chair: Shufeng Zhang, University of Arizona
Abstract ID: BAPS.2012.MAR.D15.1
Abstract: D15.00001 : Ultrafast Magnetism of Multi-component Ferromagnets and Ferrimagnets on the Time Scale of the Exchange Interaction
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ilie Radu
(Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands and Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin, BESSY II, Germany)
Revealing the ultimate speed limit at which magnetic order can be
controlled, is a fundamental challenge of modern magnetism having far
reaching implications for the magnetic recording industry [1]. Exchange
interaction is the strongest force in magnetism, being ultimately
responsible for ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic spin order. How
do spins react after being optically excited on a timescale of or even
faster than the exchange interaction?
Here, we demonstrate that femtosecond (fs) measurements of ferrimagnetic and
ferromagnetic alloys using X-ray magnetic circular dichroism provide
revolutionary new insights into the problem of ultrafast magnetism on
timescales pertinent to the exchange interaction. In particular, we show
that upon fs optical excitation the ultrafast spin reversal of GdFeCo - a
material with antiferromagnetic coupling of spins - occurs via a transient
ferromagnetic state [2]. The latter emerges due to different dynamics of the
Gd and Fe magnetic moments: Gd switches within 1.5 ps while it takes only
300 fs for Fe. Thus, by using a single fs laser pulse one can force the spin
system to evolve via an energetically unfavorable way and temporarily switch
from an antiferromagnetic to a ferromagnetic type of ordering.
In order to understand whether the observation of this temporarily decoupled
and element-specific dynamics is a general phenomenon or just something
strictly related to the case of ferrimagnetic GdFeCo, we have investigated
the demagnetization of the archetypal ferromagnetic NiFe alloys.
Essentially, we observe the same distinct magnetization dynamics of the
constituent magnetic moments: Ni demagnetizes within $\sim $300 fs being
much faster than the demagnetization of Fe of $\sim $800 fs. This distinct
demagnetization behavior leads to an apparent decoupling of the Fe and Ni
magnetic moments on a few hundreds of fs time scale, despite the strong
exchange interaction of 260meV ($\sim $16 fs) that couples them.
These observations supported by atomistic simulations, present a novel
concept of manipulating magnetic order on different classes of magnetic
materials on timescales of the exchange interaction [3].
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[1] A. Kirilyuk, A.V. Kimel and Th. Rasing, \textit{Rev. Mod. Phys.} \textbf{82}, 2731 (2010).
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[2] I. Radu \textit{et al.}, \textit{Nature} \textbf{472}, 205 (2011).
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[3] I. Radu \textit{et al.}, \textit{submitted} (2011).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2012.MAR.D15.1