Magnon confinement and trapping at the nanoscale
J. Chen, H. Yu, R. Gallardo, P. Landeros, G. Gubbiotti

TL;DR
This review discusses various strategies for confining and trapping magnons at the nanoscale, highlighting their importance in advancing magnonic devices and quantum computing applications.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent methods for magnon confinement, including static, dynamic, and topological approaches, and discusses their potential in future technologies.
Findings
Multiple confinement techniques are effective at nanoscale.
Magnon trapping enhances integration in spintronic devices.
Applications include magnonic crystals and quantum systems.
Abstract
Magnon confinement and trapping refer to the localization of magnons-quasiparticles that represent collective spin-wave excitations in magnetic materials-within specific regions or structures. This concept is essential in magnonics, a subfield of spintronics that leverages spin waves for processing and transmitting information. Compared to conventional electronics, magnonics offers lower power consumption and faster operation, making it a promising technology for future devices. Magnons can be confined using both static and dynamic methods, often relying on potential wells and barriers to restrict their free propagation and trap them in designated locations. In this review, we will explore the main strategies for magnon confinement and trapping, including: magnetic field inhomogeneities, spin textures (i.e. domain walls, vortices, skyrmions) nanostructured materials (i.e. nanowires,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic properties of thin films · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Chemical and Physical Properties of Materials
