Longitudinal Spin Hall Magnetoresistance from Spin Fluctuations
Ping Tang

TL;DR
This paper reveals a new type of spin Hall magnetoresistance effect driven by spin fluctuations near the Curie temperature, providing a novel electrical detection method for magnetic fluctuations.
Contribution
It introduces longitudinal SMR (LSMR), an unconventional effect that arises from spin fluctuations and is enhanced near the Curie temperature, unlike conventional SMR.
Findings
LSMR is critically enhanced at the Curie temperature.
LSMR magnitude becomes comparable to conventional SMR.
The effect enables electrical detection of spin fluctuations.
Abstract
Spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR), the variation in resistance in a heavy metal (HM) with the magnetization orientation of an adjacent ferromagnet (FM), has been extensively studied as a powerful tool for probing surface magnetic moments in a variety of magnetic materials. However, the conventional SMR theory assumes rigid magnetization of a fixed magnitude, an assumption that breaks down close to the FM's Curie temperature \(T_c\), where the magnetic susceptibility diverges. Here, we report an unconventional SMR effect arising from the magnetic-field modulation of spin fluctuations in the FM, while its magnetization remaining collinear to the spin Hall accumulation in the HM. In contrast to the conventional SMR, which scales with the magnetization and vanishes near , such ``longitudinal" SMR (LSMR), though suppressed at low temperatures, becomes critically enhanced at \(T_c\),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Topological Materials and Phenomena
