APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session U11: Invited Session: New Laser Techniques for Imaging and Probing at the Nanoscale
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Room: 310
Sponsoring
Unit:
DLS
Chair: Henry Kapteyn, University of Colorado Boulder
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.U11.2
Abstract: U11.00002 : Discovering new physics in magnetic thin films using coherent EUV from high harmonic generation
11:51 AM–12:27 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Tom Silva
(NIST)
The understanding of nanoscale magnetism has become much more critical with
recent advances in magnetic data storage applications, as bits on a hard
disk are already packed at scales of about 20nm. However, a microscopic
model of how spins, electrons, photons and phonons interact does not yet
exist. This understanding is fundamentally constrained in large part by our
limited ability to observe magnetism on all relevant time and length scales.
Until recently, measuring magnetization dynamics used either ultrafast
visible-wavelength lasers, or X-rays from synchrotrons and free electron
lasers. Our recent work has shown that the fastest dynamics in magnetic
materials can be captured using extreme ultraviolet (XUV) harmonics -- with
elemental resolution and at multiple atomic sites simultaneously. We first
probed with elemental sensitivity how fast the magnetic state can be
destroyed in an Fe-Ni alloy. After exciting an Fe-Ni alloy with a fs laser,
the spin sublattices randomize on sub-ps timescales. Surprisingly, even in a
strongly coupled ferromagnetic alloy, the demagnetization of Ni lags that of
Fe by 10 fs [1]. Moreover, we were able to tune this time lag by diluting
the alloy with Cu to further reduce the exchange energy. After a time lag
characteristic of the exchange energy, the Ni sublattice demagnetizes at the
same rate as Fe. This reveals both how the exchange interaction can mediate
ultrafast magnetic dynamics in alloys, and how the intrinsic demagnetization
process is site-specific such that spins on one sublattice can interact more
strongly with the optical field than spins on the other sublattice. In our
latest work, we uncovered evidence of giant spin-currents in magnetic
multilayers that are generated in the course of the laser-driven ultrafast
demagnetization process [2]. By exciting a magnetic multilayer (Fe/Ru/Ni)
with a laser pulse, and separately, yet simultaneously, probing the
magnetization response of the Ni and Fe layers when the two layers are
aligned with an applied magnetic field, we found that optically induced
demagnetization of the top Ni layer causes the buried Fe layer to undergo a
transient enhancement of the magnetization, of up to 20 percent. This is due
to an intense, majority spin-current that enters the Fe layer.
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[1] S. Mathias, et al., PNAS 109, (2012).\\[0pt]
[2] D. Rudolf, et al., Nat. Comm. 3, (2012).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.U11.2