Insulating nanomagnets driven by spin torque
Matthias B. Jungfleisch, Junjia Ding, Wei Zhang, Wanjun Jiang, John E., Pearson, Valentine Novosad, and Axel Hoffmann

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the excitation and detection of spin dynamics in YIG/Pt nanowires using spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance, revealing effects of geometry and heating, advancing insulator-based magnonic logic device development.
Contribution
It introduces a method to study spin dynamics in YIG/Pt nanowires and highlights the impact of nanostructure geometry and microwave power on magnetization behavior.
Findings
Observation of field-like and anti-damping-like torques.
Detection of quantized spin-wave modes across wire widths.
Significant resonance field shifts due to microwave heating.
Abstract
Magnetic insulators, such as yttrium iron garnet (YFeO), are ideal materials for ultra-low power spintronics applications due to their low energy dissipation and efficient spin current generation and transmission. Recently, it has been realized that spin dynamics can be driven very effectively in micrometer-sized YFeO/Pt heterostructures by spin-Hall effects. We demonstrate here the excitation and detection of spin dynamics in YFeO/Pt nanowires by spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance. The nanowires defined via electron-beam lithography are fabricated by conventional room temperature sputtering deposition on GdGaO substrates and lift-off. We observe field-like and anti-damping-like torques acting on the magnetization precession, which are due to simultaneous excitation by Oersted fields and spin-Hall torques. The…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
