Junxue Li
University of California, Berkeley
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Junxue Li.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2014
Jinhong Zhu; Qiliang Li; Junxue Li; Z. Ding; C. Y. Hua; Meng-Jie Huang; H.-J. Lin; Z. Hu; Y. Z. Wu
The effect of CoO spin orientation on exchange coupling was investigated in single-crystalline Fe/CoO/MnO/MgO(001) systems. An antiferromagnetic CoO spin reorientation transition from the in-plane direction to the out-of-plane direction was found to be associated with the in-plane strain transition in CoO film from compression to expansion. The induced uniaxial anisotropies by exchange coupling at the Fe/CoO interface are significantly stronger for the in-plane CoO spin orientation than for the out-of-plane CoO spin orientation. Our study provides a way to modify the exchange coupling in the ferromagnetic (FM)/antiferromagnetic (AFM) bilayer by modulating the strain in the AFM film.
Nature Communications | 2014
Junxue Li; A. Tan; Kyoung-Woong Moon; Andrew Doran; Matthew A. Marcus; A. T. Young; Elke Arenholz; Song Ma; R. F. Yang; C. Hwang; Z. Q. Qiu
Despite theoretical predictions, it remains an experimental challenge to realize an artificial magnetic skyrmion whose topology can be well controlled and tailored so that its topological effect can be revealed explicitly in a deformation of the spin textures. Here we report epitaxial magnetic thin films in which an artificial skyrmion is created by embedding a magnetic vortex into an out-of-plane aligned spin environment. By changing the relative orientation between the central vortex core polarity and the surrounding out-of-plane spins, we are able to control and tailor the system between two skyrmion topological states. An in-plane magnetic field is used to annihilate the skyrmion core by converting the central vortex state into a single domain state. Our result shows distinct annihilation behaviour of the skyrmion core for the two different skyrmion states, suggesting a topological effect of the magnetic skyrmions in the core annihilation process.
Nature Communications | 2016
Junxue Li; Yadong Xu; Mohammed Aldosary; Chi Tang; Zhisheng Lin; Shufeng Zhang; Roger K. Lake; Jing Shi
Pure spin current, a flow of spin angular momentum without flow of any accompanying net charge, is generated in two common ways. One makes use of the spin Hall effect in normal metals (NM) with strong spin–orbit coupling, such as Pt or Ta. The other utilizes the collective motion of magnetic moments or spin waves with the quasi-particle excitations called magnons. A popular material for the latter is yttrium iron garnet, a magnetic insulator (MI). Here we demonstrate in NM/MI/NM trilayers that these two types of spin currents are interconvertible across the interfaces, predicated as the magnon-mediated current drag phenomenon. The transmitted signal scales linearly with the driving current without a threshold and follows the power-law Tn with n ranging from 1.5 to 2.5. Our results indicate that the NM/MI/NM trilayer structure can serve as a scalable pure spin current valve device which is an essential ingredient in spintronics.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012
Junxue Li; Eric Jin; H. Son; A. Tan; W. N. Cao; Chanyong Hwang; Z. Q. Qiu
A vector magnet is designed and assembled with two electromagnets to produce a rotational magnetic field in any direction within a plane. This design allows a rotation of the magnetic field without a mechanical rotation of the magnets. The fast speed of the field rotation (~10 s for a complete 360° rotation) and the stability against mechanical vibration easily overcome the slow drifting effect in anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) and rotational magneto-optic Kerr effect (ROTMOKE) measurements. As an example we applied this vector magnet to carry out AMR and ROTMOKE measurements on epitaxial growth of Fe(10 nm)∕MgO(001) films. The result demonstrates the stability and high quality of the vector magnet in determining the magnetic anisotropy of magnetic thin films using AMR and ROTMOKE techniques.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
M. M. Lacerda; Fariborz Kargar; Ece Aytan; R. Samnakay; Bishwajit Debnath; Junxue Li; Alexander Khitun; Roger K. Lake; Jing Shi; Alexander A. Balandin
We report the results of an investigation of the temperature dependence of the magnon and phonon frequencies in NiO. A combination of Brillouin-Mandelstam and Raman spectroscopies allowed us to elucidate the evolution of the phonon and magnon spectral signatures from the Brillouin zone center (GHz range) to the second-order peaks from the zone boundary (THz range). The temperature-dependent behavior of the magnon and phonon bands in the NiO spectrum indicates the presence of antiferromagnetic (AF) order fluctuation or a persistent AF state at temperatures substantially above the Neel temperature (TN=523 K). Tuning the intensity of the excitation laser provides a method for disentangling the features of magnons from acoustic phonons in AF materials without the application of a magnetic field. Our results are useful for the interpretation of the inelastic-light scattering spectrum of NiO and add to the knowledge of its magnon properties important for THz spintronic devices.We report results of an investigation of the temperature dependence of the magnon and phonon frequencies in NiO. A combination of Brillouin - Mandelstam and Raman spectroscopies allowed us to elucidate the evolution of the phonon and magnon spectral signatures from the Brillouin zone center (GHz range) to the second-order peaks from the zone boundary (THz range). The temperature-dependent behavior of the magnon and phonon bands in the NiO spectrum indicates the presence of antiferromagnetic (AF) order fluctuation or a persistent AF state at temperatures above the Neel temperature (T=523 K). Tuning the intensity of the excitation laser provides a method for disentangling the features of magnons from acoustic phonons without the application of a magnetic field. Our results are useful for interpretation of the inelastic-light scattering spectrum of NiO, and add to the knowledge of its magnon properties important for THz spintronic devices.
Physical Review B | 2017
Shanshan Su; Yafis Barlas; Junxue Li; Jing Shi; Roger Lake
In a heterostructure of graphene and the ferromagnetic insulator EuO, the Eu atoms induce proximity exchange and inter-valley interactions in the graphene layer. Constrained by the lattice symmetries, and guided by ab initio calculations, a model Hamiltonian is constructed that describes the low-energy bands. Band parameters such as proximity induced exchange splitting, spin orbit coupling, and inter-valley interaction are determined. Calculations of the Chern number identify the conditions under which the hetero-structures exhibit topologically non-trivial bands that give rise to the quantum anomalous Hall effect with a Hall conductivity of σxy = 2e /h.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
Mohammed Aldosary; Junxue Li; Chi Tang; Yadong Xu; Jian-Guo Zheng; Krassimir N. Bozhilov; Jing Shi
30-80 nm thick yttrium iron garnet (YIG) films are grown by pulsed laser deposition on a 5 nm thick sputtered Pt atop gadolinium gallium garnet substrate (GGG) (110). Upon post-growth rapid thermal annealing, single crystal YIG(110) emerges as if it were epitaxially grown on GGG(110) despite the presence of the intermediate Pt film. The YIG surface shows atomic steps with the root-mean-square roughness of 0.12 nm on flat terraces. Both Pt/YIG and GGG/Pt interfaces are atomically sharp. The resulting YIG(110) films show clear in-plane uniaxial magnetic anisotropy with a well-defined easy axis along 〈001〉 and a peak-to-peak ferromagnetic resonance linewidth of 7.5 Oe at 9.32 GHz, similar to YIG epitaxially grown on GGG. Both spin Hall magnetoresistance and longitudinal spin Seebeck effects in the inverted bilayers indicate excellent Pt/YIG interface quality.
Physical Review B | 2017
Junxue Li; Guoqiang Yu; Chi Tang; Yizhou Liu; Zhong Shi; Yawen Liu; Aryan Navabi; Mohammed Aldosary; Qiming Shao; Kang L. Wang; Roger Lake; Jing Shi
Electrical currents in a magnetic insulator/heavy metal heterostructure can induce two simultaneous effects, namely, spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) on the heavy metal side and spin-orbit torques (SOTs) on the magnetic insulator side. Within the framework of the pure spin current model based on the bulk spin Hall effect (SHE), the ratio of the spin Hall-induced anomalous Hall effect (SH-AHE) to SMR should be equal to the ratio of the field-like torque (FLT) to damping-like torque (DLT). We perform a quantitative study of SMR, SH-AHE, and SOTs in a series of thulium iron garnet/platinum or Tm3Fe5O12/Pt heterostructures with different Tm3Fe5O12 thicknesses, where Tm3Fe5O12 is a ferrimagnetic insulator with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. We find the ratio between measured effective fields of FLT and DLT is at least 2 times larger than the ratio of the SH-AHE to SMR. In addition, the bulk SHE model grossly underestimates the spin torque efficiency of FLT. Our results reveal deficiencies of the bulk SHE model and also address the importance of interfacial effects such as the Rashba and magnetic proximity effects in magnetic insulator/heavy metal heterostructures.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2015
J. H. Liang; J. Z. Cao; Junxue Li; Y. Z. Wu
A rotating field method was applied to separate linear and quadratic magneto-optic Kerr effects (MOKE) of Fe/GaAs(001) and Fe/MgO/GaAs(001) epitaxial films, and two quadratic MOKE terms could be quantitatively separated. The linear MOKE was independent of crystal orientation, but the quadratic MOKE showed a sinusoidal relationship with a 90° period. The experimental results are fully consistent with theory based on the transfer matrix method.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Junxue Li; A. Tan; Kyoung-Woong Moon; Andrew Doran; Matthew A. Marcus; A. T. Young; Elke Arenholz; S. Ma; R. F. Yang; Chanyong Hwang; Z. Q. Qiu
While a magnetic antivortex state can be created in ring structures, much effort has been devoted to stabilizing a magnetic antivortex as the ground state in a single island. Among many proposals, less attention has been paid to the role of magnetocrystalline anisotropy because most magnetic microstructures are made of polycrystalline materials. By patterning epitaxial Fe/Ag(001) films along different in-plane directions, we show that the Fe magnetocrystalline anisotropy plays a very important role in stabilizing different types of vortex/antivortex states. In particular, we find that an Fe island in the shape of an elongated hexagon favors vortex array formation when the long edge is parallel to the Fe easy magnetization axis, and favors the vortex-antivortex array formation when the long edge is parallel to the Fe hard magnetization axis.