# Magnetization reorientation due to the superconducting transition in   heavy-metal heterostructures

**Authors:** Lina G. Johnsen, Niladri Banerjee, and Jacob Linder

arXiv: 1901.00501 · 2019-04-25

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how the superconducting transition can induce magnetization reorientation in heavy-metal heterostructures, revealing temperature-dependent magnetic behavior influenced by band-structure effects and transport regimes.

## Contribution

It demonstrates the reciprocal effect of superconductivity on magnetization orientation, including reorientation phenomena and $T_c$ dependence on magnetization direction in ballistic regimes.

## Key findings

- Magnetization reorientation from in-plane to out-of-plane below $T_c$.
- Superconductivity influences magnetic anisotropy and $T_c$ based on magnetization orientation.
- Ballistic transport regime shows different $T_c$ dependence compared to diffusive regime.

## Abstract

Recent theoretical and experimental work has demonstrated how the superconducting critical temperature ($T_c$) can be modified by rotating the magnetization of a single homogeneous ferromagnet proximity-coupled to the superconducting layer. This occurs when the superconductor and ferromagnet are separated by a thin heavy normal metal that provides an enhanced interfacial Rashba spin-orbit interaction. We consider the reciprocal effect: magnetization reorientation driven by the superconducting phase transition. We solve the tight-binding Bogoliubov-de Gennes equations on a lattice self-consistently and find that the relative angle between the spin-orbit field and the magnetization gives rise to a contribution in the free energy even in the normal state due to band-structure effects. For temperatures below $T_c$, superconductivity gives rise to a competing contribution. By lowering the temperature, in addition to reorientation of the favored magnetization direction from in-plane to out-of-plane, a $\pi/4$ in-plane rotation for thicker ferromagnetic layers is possible. Furthermore, computation of $T_c$ of the structure in the ballistic limit shows a dependence on the in-plane orientation of the magnetization, in contrast to our previous result on the diffusive limit. This finding is relevant with respect to thin-film heterostructures since these are likely to be in the ballistic regime of transport. Finally, we discuss the experimental feasibility of observing the magnetic anisotropy induced by the superconducting transition when other magnetic anisotropies, such as the shape anisotropy for a ferromagnetic film, are taken into account. Our work suggests that the superconducting condensation energy in principle can trigger a reorientation of the magnetization of a thin-film ferromagnet upon lowering the temperature below $T_c$, in particular for ferromagnets with weak magnetic anisotropies.

## Full text

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## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.00501/full.md

## References

23 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.00501/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.00501