B. Divinskiy
University of Münster
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Publication
Featured researches published by B. Divinskiy.
Nature Communications | 2016
V. E. Demidov; Sergei Urazhdin; Ronghua Liu; B. Divinskiy; Andrey Telegin; S. O. Demokritov
Utilization of pure spin currents not accompanied by the flow of electrical charge provides unprecedented opportunities for the emerging technologies based on the electrons spin degree of freedom, such as spintronics and magnonics. It was recently shown that pure spin currents can be used to excite coherent magnetization dynamics in magnetic nanostructures. However, because of the intrinsic nonlinear self-localization effects, magnetic auto-oscillations in the demonstrated devices were spatially confined, preventing their applications as sources of propagating spin waves in magnonic circuits using these waves as signal carriers. Here, we experimentally demonstrate efficient excitation and directional propagation of coherent spin waves generated by pure spin current. We show that this can be achieved by using the nonlocal spin injection mechanism, which enables flexible design of magnetic nanosystems and allows one to efficiently control their dynamic characteristics.
Nature Communications | 2017
V. E. Demidov; Sergei Urazhdin; B. Divinskiy; V. D. Bessonov; A. B. Rinkevich; V. V. Ustinov; S. O. Demokritov
Pure spin currents provide the possibility to control the magnetization state of conducting and insulating magnetic materials. They allow one to increase or reduce the density of magnons, and achieve coherent dynamic states of magnetization reminiscent of the Bose–Einstein condensation. However, until now there was no direct evidence that the state of the magnon gas subjected to spin current can be treated thermodynamically. Here, we show experimentally that the spin current generated by the spin-Hall effect drives the magnon gas into a quasi-equilibrium state that can be described by the Bose–Einstein statistics. The magnon population function is characterized either by an increased effective chemical potential or by a reduced effective temperature, depending on the spin current polarization. In the former case, the chemical potential can closely approach, at large driving currents, the lowest-energy magnon state, indicating the possibility of spin current-driven Bose–Einstein condensation.Spin current-induced quasi-equilibrium state of magnon gas described by the Bose–Einstein statistics has been previously theoretically predicted. Here, authors experimentally show that the spin current-driven magnon distribution can be treated thermodynamically, and potentially form a Bose–Einstein condensate.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
Sergei Urazhdin; V. E. Demidov; Rongxing Cao; B. Divinskiy; V. Tyberkevych; A. N. Slavin; A. B. Rinkevich; S. O. Demokritov
We report the experimental observation of mutual synchronization of magnetic nano-oscillators driven by pure spin current generated by nonlocal spin injection. We show that the oscillators efficiently synchronize due to the direct spatial overlap of the dynamical modes excited by the spin current, which is facilitated by the large size of the auto-oscillation area inherent to these devices. The synchronization occurs within an interval of the driving current determined by the competition between the dynamic nonlinearity that facilitates synchronization and the short-wavelength magnetic fluctuations enhanced by the spin current that suppress synchronization. The demonstrated synchronization effects can be utilized to control the spatial and spectral characteristics of the dynamical states induced by the spin currents.
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
V. E. Demidov; Sergei Urazhdin; B. Divinskiy; A. B. Rinkevich; S. O. Demokritov
We study experimentally the auto-oscillation characteristics of magnetic nano-oscillators driven by pure spin currents generated by nonlocal spin injection. By combining micro-focus Brillouin light scattering spectroscopy with electronic microwave spectroscopy, we are able to simultaneously perform both the spatial and the high-resolution spectral analyses of auto-oscillations induced by spin current. We find that the devices exhibit a highly coherent dynamics with the spectral linewidth of a few megahertz at room temperature. This narrow linewidth can be achieved over a wide range of operational frequencies, demonstrating a significant potential of nonlocal oscillators for applications.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
B. Divinskiy; V. E. Demidov; S. O. Demokritov; A. B. Rinkevich; Sergei Urazhdin
Downscaling poses a number of new challenges for the implementation of magnonic devices.
Physical Review B | 2017
B. Divinskiy; Sergei Urazhdin; V. E. Demidov; Alexander Kozhanov; A. P. Nosov; A. B. Rinkevich; S. O. Demokritov
Magnetic droplets are dynamical solitons that can be generated by locally suppressing the dynamical damping in magnetic films with perpendicular anisotropy. To date, droplets have been observed only in nanocontact spin-torque oscillators operated by spin-polarized electrical currents. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that magnetic droplets can be nucleated and sustained by pure spin currents in nanoconstriction-based spin Hall devices. Micromagnetic simulations support our interpretation of the data, and indicate that in addition to the stationary droplets, propagating solitons can be also generated in the studied system, which can be utilized for the information transmission in spintronic applications.
Advanced Materials | 2018
B. Divinskiy; V. E. Demidov; Sergei Urazhdin; Ryan Freeman; A. B. Rinkevich; S. O. Demokritov
The emerging field of nanomagnonics utilizes high-frequency waves of magnetization-spin waves-for the transmission and processing of information on the nanoscale. The advent of spin-transfer torque has spurred significant advances in nanomagnonics, by enabling highly efficient local spin wave generation in magnonic nanodevices. Furthermore, the recent emergence of spin-orbitronics, which utilizes spin-orbit interaction as the source of spin torque, has provided a unique ability to exert spin torque over spatially extended areas of magnonic structures, enabling enhanced spin wave transmission. Here, it is experimentally demonstrated that these advances can be efficiently combined. The same spin-orbit torque mechanism is utilized for the generation of propagating spin waves, and for the long-range enhancement of their propagation, in a single integrated nanomagnonic device. The demonstrated system exhibits a controllable directional asymmetry of spin wave emission, which is highly beneficial for applications in nonreciprocal magnonic logic and neuromorphic computing.The emerging field of nano-magnonics utilizes high-frequency waves of magnetization - the spin waves - for the transmission and processing of information on the nanoscale. The advent of spin-transfer torque has spurred significant advances in nano-magnonics, by enabling highly efficient local spin-wave generation in magnonic nanodevices. Furthermore, the recent emergence of spin-orbitronics, which utilizes spin-orbit interaction as the source of spin torque, has provided a unique ability to exert spin torque over spatially extended areas of magnonic structures, enabling enhanced spin-wave transmission. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that these advances can be efficiently combined. We utilize the same spin-orbit torque mechanism for the generation of propagating spin waves, and for the long-range enhancement of their propagation, in a single integrated nano-magnonic device. The demonstrated system exhibits a controllable directional asymmetry of spin wave emission, which is highly beneficial for applications in non-reciprocal magnonic logic and neuromorphic computing.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
B. Divinskiy; V. E. Demidov; Alexander Kozhanov; A. B. Rinkevich; S. O. Demokritov; Sergei Urazhdin
We experimentally study spin-Hall nano-oscillators based on [Co/Ni] multilayers with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. We show that these devices exhibit single-frequency auto-oscillations at current densities comparable to those for in-plane magnetized oscillators. The demonstrated oscillators exhibit large magnetization precession amplitudes, and their oscillation frequency is highly tunable by the electric current. These features make them promising for applications in high-speed integrated microwave circuits.
Physical Review B | 2018
Nicolas M. Thiéry; V. V. Naletov; Laurent Vila; Alain Marty; Ariel Brenac; J.-F. Jacquot; G. de Loubens; M. Viret; A. Anane; V. Cros; J. Ben Youssef; Nathan Beaulieu; V. E. Demidov; B. Divinskiy; S. O. Demokritov; O. Klein
ieee international magnetics conference | 2017
B. Divinskiy; V. E. Demidov; S. O. Demokritov; Sergei Urazhdin