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Dive into the research topics where A. Deac is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Deac.


Journal of Physics D | 2015

Direct measurement of the magnetic anisotropy field in Mn-Ga and Mn-Co-Ga Heusler films

C. Fowley; Siham Ouardi; Takahide Kubota; Oguz Yildirim; Andreas Neudert; K. Lenz; Volker Sluka; J. Lindner; Joseph M. Law; Shigemi Mizukami; Gerhard H. Fecher; Claudia Felser; A. Deac

The static and dynamic magnetic properties of tetragonally distorted Mn–Ga based alloys were investigated. Static properties are determined in magnetic fields up to 6.5 T using SQUID magnetometry. For the pure Mn1.6Ga film, the saturation magnetisation is 0.36 MA m−1 and the coercivity is 0.29 T. Partial substitution of Mn by Co results in Mn2.6Co0.3Ga1.1. The saturation magnetisation of those films drops to 0.2 MA m−1 and the coercivity is increased to 1 T.The time-resolved magneto-optical Kerr effect (TR-MOKE) is used to probe the high-frequency dynamics of Mn–Ga. The ferromagnetic resonance frequency extrapolated to zero-field is found to be 125 GHz with a Gilbert damping, α, of 0.019. The anisotropy field is determined from both SQUID and TR-MOKE to be 4.5 T, corresponding to an effective anisotropy density of 0.81 MJ m−3.Given the large anisotropy field of the Mn2.6Co0.3Ga1.1 film, pulsed magnetic fields up to 60 T are used to determine the field strength required to saturate the film in the plane. For this, the extraordinary Hall effect was employed as a probe of the local magnetisation. By integrating the reconstructed in-plane magnetisation curve, the effective anisotropy energy density for Mn2.6Co0.3Ga1.1 is determined to be 1.23 MJ m−3.


Journal of Physics D | 2011

Spin-transfer torque induced vortex dynamics in Fe/Ag/Fe nanopillars

Volker Sluka; Attila Kákay; A. Deac; Daniel E. Bürgler; Riccardo Hertel; Claus M. Schneider

We report on the experimental and analytical work on spin-transfer torque induced vortex dynamics in metallic nanopillars with in-plane magnetized layers. We study nanopillars with a diameter of 150?nm, containing two Fe layers with a thickness of 15?nm and 30?nm, respectively, separated by a 6?nm Ag spacer. The sample geometry is such that it allows for the formation of magnetic vortices in the Fe discs. As confirmed by micromagnetic simulations, we are able to prepare states where one magnetic layer is homogeneously magnetized while the other contains a vortex. We experimentally show that in this configuration spin-transfer torque can excite vortex dynamics and analyse their dependence on a magnetic field applied in the sample plane. The centre of gyration is continuously dislocated from the disc centre, and the potential changes its shape with field strength. The latter is reflected in the field dependence of the excitation frequency. In the second part we propose a novel mechanism for the excitation of the gyrotropic mode in nanopillars with a perfectly homogeneously magnetized in-plane polarizing layer. We analytically show that in this configuration the vortex can absorb energy from the spin-polarized electric current if the angular spin-transfer efficiency function is asymmetric. This effect is supported by micromagnetic simulations.


Applied Physics Express | 2014

Zero-field spin-transfer oscillators combining in-plane and out-of-plane magnetized layers

C. Fowley; Volker Sluka; Kerstin Bernert; J. Lindner; J. Fassbender; William H. Rippard; Matthew R. Pufall; Stephen E. Russek; A. Deac

Excited magnetization dynamics in a spin-valve device consisting of an in-plane polarizer and an out-of-plane free layer were studied numerically. In the case where the free layer is assumed to lack any in-plane anisotropy components, a finite external field is required to generate steady-state dynamics, in agreement with previous reports. We demonstrate that this constraint can be removed and precession can be stabilized in zero applied field by introducing an additional in-plane anisotropy axis. Moreover, the in-plane anisotropy offers an additional degree of freedom for tuning the frequency response of the device.


Physical Review B | 2012

Quenched Slonczewski windmill in spin-torque vortex oscillators

Volker Sluka; Attila Kákay; A. Deac; Daniel E. Bürgler; Riccardo Hertel; Claus M. Schneider

We present a combined analytical and numerical study on double-vortex spin-torque nano-oscillators and describe a mechanism that suppresses the windmill modes. The magnetization dynamics is dominated by the gyrotropic precession of the vortex in one of the ferromagnetic layers. In the other layer, the vortex gyration is strongly damped. The dominating layer for the magnetization dynamics is determined by the sign of the product between sample current and the chiralities. Measurements on Fe/Ag/Fe nanopillars support these findings. The results open up a new perspective for building high quality-factor spin-torque oscillators operating at selectable, well-separated frequency bands.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Tunnelling magnetoresistance of the half-metallic compensated ferrimagnet Mn2RuxGa

Kiril Borisov; Davide Betto; Yong-Chang Lau; C. Fowley; A. Titova; Naganivetha Thiyagarajah; Gwenael Atcheson; J. Lindner; A. Deac; J. M. D. Coey; Plamen Stamenov; Karsten Rode

Tunnel magnetoresistance ratios of up to 40% are measured between 10 K and 300 K when the highly spin-polarized compensated ferrimagnet, Mn2RuxGa, is integrated into MgO-based perpendicular magnetic tunnel junctions. Temperature and bias dependences of the tunnel magnetoresistance effect, with a sign change near −0.2 V, reflect the structure of the Mn2RuxGa interface density of states. Despite magnetic moment vanishing at a compensation temperature of 200 K for x≈0.8, the tunnel magnetoresistance ratio remains non-zero throughout the compensation region, demonstrating that the spin-transport is governed by one of the Mn sub-lattices only. Broad temperature range magnetic field immunity of at least 0.5 T is demonstrated in the same sample. The high spin polarization and perpendicular magnetic anisotropy make Mn2RuxGa suitable for applications in both non-volatile magnetic random access memory cells and terahertz spin-transfer oscillators.


ieee international magnetics conference | 2015

Stacked topological spin textures as emitters for multidimensional spin wave modes

Volker Sluka; Markus Weigand; Attila Kákay; Artur Erbe; V. Tyberkevych; A. N. Slavin; A. Deac; J. Lindner; J. Fassbender; J. Raabe; S. Wintz

The investigation of propagating spin waves is a key topic of contemporary magnetism research. For the excitation of spin waves with short wavelengths, it was typically necessary to either use transducers with sizes on the order of the desired wavelengths (striplines or point-contacts) or to generate those spin waves parametrically by a double-frequency spatially uniform microwave signal. Only recently, a novel mechanism for the local excitation of spin waves, which overcomes the wavelength limit given by the minimum patterning size has been discovered. This method utilizes the translation of natural topological defects, namely the gyration of spin vortex cores. A spin vortex is characterized by a planar, flux-closing magnetization curl, which tilts out of the plane in the central nanoscopic core region [cf. Fig. 1(a)]. Both, the in-plane rotation sense of the curl (circulation) and the orientation of the perpendicular core (polarity), are independently either positive or negative. The initial study was carried out on a vortex pair system with opposite circulations and equal polarities, in which the two vortices were stacked via a nonmagnetic inter-layer [cf. Fig. 1(b) and 1(c)]. In such a system, spin waves can be generated by lateral magnetic field excitation at the vortex cores. Scanning transmission x-ray microscopy (STXM) was used to directly image these spin waves propagating to the rim of the sample in a spiraling manner [cf. Fig. 1(d)]. Thereby, the resulting spin wave length was found to be directly tunable by the excitation frequency. Moreover, the resulting spin waves were analytically calculated to exhibit a gapless, linear, and non-reciprocal dispersion relation with much shorter wave lengths compared to spin waves of the same frequency in corresponding single layer films.


IEEE Magnetics Letters | 2017

Spin Torque Switching in Nanopillars With Antiferromagnetic Reference Layer

Monika Arora; C. Fowley; Tommy McKinnon; Ewa Kowalska; Volker Sluka; A. Deac; Bret Heinrich; Erol Girt

Spin-transfer-torque-induced switching is investigated in 200 nm diameter circularly shaped, perpendicularly 10 magnetized nanopillars. A synthetic antiferromagnet, consisting of two Co/Ni multilayers coupled antiferromagnetically 11 across a Ru layer, is used as a reference layer to minimize the dipolar field on the free layer. The free layer is a single 12 4 × [Co/Ni] multilayer. The use of Pt and Pd was avoided to lower the spin-orbit scattering in magnetic layers and intrinsic 13 damping in the free layer, and therefore, reduce the critical current required for spin-transfer-torque switching. The intrinsic 14 Gilbert damping constant of a continuous 4 × [Co/Ni] multilayer film was measured by ferromagnetic resonance to be 15 α = 0.022, which is significantly lower than in Ptor Pd-based magnetic multilayers. In zero magnetic field, the critical 16 current required to switch the free layer from parallel to antiparallel alignment is 5.2 mA, and from antiparallel to parallel 17 alignment is 4.9 mA. Given the volume of the free layer, VFL = 1.01 × 10-22 m3, the switching efficiency, Ic/(VFL × μ0Hc), 18 is 5.28 × 1020 A/T·m3, twice as efficient as any previously reported device with a similar structure.


AIP Advances | 2016

Evolution of the interfacial magnetic anisotropy in MgO/CoFeB/Ta/Ru based multilayers as a function of annealing temperature

Yuriy Aleksandrov; C. Fowley; Ewa Kowalska; Volker Sluka; Oguz Yildirim; J. Lindner; Berthold Ocker; J. Fassbender; A. Deac

We report the effect of annealing temperature on the dynamic and static magnetic properties of MgO/CoFeB/Ta/Ru multilayers. Angular resolved ferromagnetic resonance measurement results show that the as-deposited film exhibits in-plane magnetic anisotropy, whereas in the annealed films the magnetic easy-axis is almost along the direction perpendicular to the plane of the layers. The extracted interfacial anisotropy energy, Ki, is maximized at an annealing temperature 225∘C, in agreement with the vibrating sample magnetometry results. Although the magnetization is not fully out-of-plane, controlling the degree of the magnetization obliqueness may be advantageous for specific applications such as spin-transfer oscillators.


ieee international magnetics conference | 2015

Spin-transfer effects in MgO-based tunnel junctions with an out-of-plane free layer and an in-plane polarizer: Static states and steady-state precession

E. Kowalska; Volker Sluka; C. Fowley; Attila Kákay; Y. Aleksandrov; J. Lindner; J. Fassbender; A. Deac

This paper aims to explore potential mechanisms for sustaining steady-state precession in MgO-based magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJ) with an in-plane polarizer and an out-of-plane free layer. The Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert-Slonczewski equation is analytically and numerically solved for a nano-pillar MTJ with circular cross-section under constant perpendicular applied current and field. It is demonstrated that the spin torque angular asymmetry is sufficient to sustain the spin transfer torque-driven dynamics of spin-torque nano-oscillators.


ieee international magnetics conference | 2015

Zero-field spin transfer oscillators combining in-plane and out-of-plane magnetized free layers

C. Fowley; Volker Sluka; K. Bernert; J. Lindner; J. Fassbender; William H. Rippard; Matthew R. Pufall; Stephen E. Russek; A. Deac

Spin-transfer-torque driven magnetization dynamics in a spin-valve device consisting of an in-plane magnetized polarizer and an out-of-plane magnetized free layer were studied numerically. Such devices hold promise for nanoscale wireless transmitters operating at gigahertz frequencies, compatible with current mobile telephone and wireless local area network technologies [1]. In traditional spin-transfer-torque devices, with applications as memory elements (spin-transfer-torque MRAM), the magnetic easy axes of both the free and reference layers are co-linear (either in-plane magnetized or perpendicularly magnetized) in order to give the maximum difference in magnetoresistance between the two available storage states i .e . fully parallel or fully anti-parallel alignment. For spin-transfer-oscillators the situation is somewhat different. The criterion for having two stable static states with well separated resistance values is no longer an important factor. What is desired is a precessional orbit that passes through both the fully parallel and fully anti-parallel state as well as the maximisation of the torque in the initial state. For this, the most efficient geometry is one in which the free layer is magnetized out-of-plane and the polarizing layer is magnetized in-plane. For the ground state, the spin-transfer-torque efficiency is close to maximum as the angle between the two layers is 90°. The amplitude of oscillation is maximised as precession around the film normal allows passage through the parallel and anti-parallel states in one precession cycle [2,3].

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J. Lindner

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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C. Fowley

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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Volker Sluka

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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J. Fassbender

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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Attila Kákay

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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M. Gensch

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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E. Kowalska

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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K. Bernert

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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N. Awari

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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