Long-range spin-wave propagation in transversely magnetized nano-scaled conduits
Bj\"orn Heinz, Qi Wang, Michael Schneider, Elisabeth Wei{\ss}, Akira, Lentfert, Bert L\"agel, Thomas Br\"acher, Carsten Dubs, Oleksandr V., Dobrovolskiy, Philipp Pirro, Andrii V. Chumak

TL;DR
This study demonstrates long-range spin-wave propagation in transversely magnetized nano-conduits, revealing potential for low-energy magnonic devices with efficient information transport at the nanoscale.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental and simulation evidence of long-distance spin-wave propagation in transversely magnetized nanostructures, highlighting their unique dispersion and non-reciprocity features.
Findings
Decay length up to 8 micrometers
Spin-wave lifetime up to 44.7 nanoseconds
Observation of frequency non-reciprocity
Abstract
Magnonics attracts increasing attention in the view of novel low-energy computation technologies based on spin waves. Recently, spin-wave propagation in longitudinally magnetized nano-scaled spin-wave conduits was demonstrated, proving the fundamental feasibility of magnonics at the sub-100 nm scale. Transversely magnetized nano-conduits, which are of great interest in this regard as they offer a large group velocity and a potentially chirality-based protected transport of energy, have not yet been investigated due to their complex internal magnetic field distribution. Here, we present a study of propagating spin waves in a transversely magnetized nanoscopic yttrium iron garnet conduit of 50 nm width. Space and time-resolved micro-focused Brillouin-light-scattering spectroscopy is employed to measure the spin-wave group velocity and decay length. A long-range spin-wave propagation is…
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