Temperature-dependent critical spin-orbit field for orthogonal switching in antiferromagnets
R. Rama-Eiroa, R. M. Otxoa, and U. Atxitia

TL;DR
This paper investigates how temperature influences the critical spin-orbit field required for orthogonal switching in antiferromagnets, revealing that temperature variation can enable ultrafast switching with reduced fields.
Contribution
The study extends existing theory to finite temperatures, showing the critical field's dependence on temperature and pulse duration, and provides an analytical connection between short and long pulse regimes.
Findings
Critical field depends strongly on temperature.
Temperature variation can facilitate ultrafast switching.
Analytical expression links short and long pulse limits.
Abstract
The discovery of current-induced spin-orbit torque (SOT) orthogonal reorientation, also known as orthogonal switching, of metallic MnAu and CuMnAs has opened the door for ultrafast writing of an antiferromagnet (AFM). Phenomenological theory predicts that the minimum field necessary for SOT switching -- critical field -- for ultrashort pulses increases inversely proportional to the pulse duration, thereby limiting the use of ultrafast stimulus as driving force for switching. We explore the possibility that by varying the working temperature the critical field reduces enabling orthogonal switching in response to ultrashort pulses. To do so, we extend previous theory to finite temperature and show that the critical field for an orthogonal switching strongly depends on temperature. We determine how the temperature dependence of the critical field varies as a function of the pulse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Magnetic Properties of Alloys
