An observable effect of spin inertia in slow magneto-dynamics: Increase of the switching error rates in nanoscale ferromagnets
Rahnuma Rahman, Supriyo Bandyopadhyay

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that spin inertia significantly affects the error rates in magnetization switching of nanoscale ferromagnets, even over slow dynamics timescales, impacting the reliability of magnetic memory and logic devices.
Contribution
It reveals an observable effect of spin inertia on switching error probabilities in slow magneto-dynamics, challenging previous assumptions of its insignificance.
Findings
Spin inertia increases switching error probability.
Effect observed even when switching takes nanoseconds.
Implications for magnetic memory reliability.
Abstract
The Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG) equation, used to model magneto-dynamics in ferromagnets, tacitly assumes that the angular momentum associated with spin precession can relax instantaneously when the real or effective magnetic field causing the precession is turned off. This neglect of "spin inertia" is unphysical and would violate energy conservation. Recently, the LLG equation was modified to account for inertia effects. The consensus, however, seems to be that such effects would be unimportant in slow magneto-dynamics that take place over time scales much longer that the relaxation time of the angular momentum, which is typically few fs to perhaps ~100 ps in ferromagnets. Here, we show that there is at least one very serious and observable effect of spin inertia even in slow magneto-dynamics. It involves the switching error probability associated with flipping the magnetization of a…
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