Michael J. Erickson
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by Michael J. Erickson.
Nature | 2013
Sheng Zhang; Ian Gilbert; Cristiano Nisoli; Gia-Wei Chern; Michael J. Erickson; Liam O’Brien; Chris Leighton; Paul E. Lammert; Vincent H. Crespi; P. Schiffer
Artificial spin ice is a class of lithographically created arrays of interacting ferromagnetic nanometre-scale islands. It was introduced to investigate many-body phenomena related to frustration and disorder in a material that could be tailored to precise specifications and imaged directly. Because of the large magnetic energy scales of these nanoscale islands, it has so far been impossible to thermally anneal artificial spin ice into desired thermodynamic ensembles; nearly all studies of artificial spin ice have either treated it as a granular material activated by alternating fields or focused on the as-grown state of the arrays. This limitation has prevented experimental investigation of novel phases that can emerge from the nominal ground states of frustrated lattices. For example, artificial kagome spin ice, in which the islands are arranged on the edges of a hexagonal net, is predicted to support states with monopolar charge order at entropies below that of the previously observed pseudo-ice manifold. Here we demonstrate a method for thermalizing artificial spin ices with square and kagome lattices by heating above the Curie temperature of the constituent material. In this manner, artificial square spin ice achieves unprecedented thermal ordering of the moments. In artificial kagome spin ice, we observe incipient crystallization of the magnetic charges embedded in pseudo-ice, with crystallites of magnetic charges whose size can be controlled by tuning the lattice constant. We find excellent agreement between experimental data and Monte Carlo simulations of emergent charge–charge interactions.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Sheng Zhang; Jie Li; Ian Gilbert; Jason Bartell; Michael J. Erickson; Yu Pan; Paul E. Lammert; Cristiano Nisoli; K. K. Kohli; Rajiv Misra; Vincent H. Crespi; Nitin Samarth; Chris Leighton; P. Schiffer
We have studied frustrated kagome arrays and unfrustrated honeycomb arrays of magnetostatically interacting single-domain ferromagnetic islands with magnetization normal to the plane. The measured pairwise spin correlations of both lattices can be reproduced by models based solely on nearest-neighbor correlations. The kagome array has qualitatively different magnetostatics but identical lattice topology to previously studied artificial spin ice systems composed of in-plane moments. The two systems show striking similarities in the development of moment pair correlations, demonstrating a universality in artificial spin ice behavior independent of specific realization in a particular material system.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Tianran Chen; Michael J. Erickson; P. A. Crowell; Chris Leighton
Although pinning of domain walls in ferromagnets is ubiquitous, the absence of an appropriate characterization tool has limited the ability to correlate the physical and magnetic microstructures of ferromagnetic films with specific pinning mechanisms. Here, we show that the pinning of a magnetic vortex, the simplest possible domain structure in soft ferromagnets, is strongly correlated with surface roughness, and we make a quantitative comparison of the pinning energy and spatial range in films of various thickness. The results demonstrate that thickness fluctuations on the lateral length scale of the vortex core diameter, i.e., an effective roughness at a specific length scale, provides the dominant pinning mechanism. We argue that this mechanism will be important in virtually any soft ferromagnetic film.
Nature Communications | 2014
Liam O'Brien; Michael J. Erickson; D. Spivak; Haile Ambaye; R. J. Goyette; Valeria Lauter; P. A. Crowell; Chris Leighton
The non-local spin-valve is pivotal in spintronics, enabling separation of charge and spin currents, disruptive potential applications and the study of pressing problems in the physics of spin injection and relaxation. Primary among these problems is the perplexing non-monotonicity in the temperature-dependent spin accumulation in non-local ferromagnetic/non-magnetic metal structures, where the spin signal decreases at low temperatures. Here we show that this effect is strongly correlated with the ability of the ferromagnetic to form dilute local magnetic moments in the NM. This we achieve by studying a significantly expanded range of ferromagnetic/non-magnetic combinations. We argue that local moments, formed by ferromagnetic/non-magnetic interdiffusion, suppress the injected spin polarization and diffusion length via a manifestation of the Kondo effect, thus explaining all observations. We further show that this suppression can be completely quenched, even at interfaces that are highly susceptible to the effect, by insertion of a thin non-moment-supporting interlayer.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2011
A. Baruth; Marc D. Rodwogin; A. Shankar; Michael J. Erickson; Marc A. Hillmyer; Chris Leighton
Physical Review B | 2016
Liam O’Brien; D. Spivak; N. Krueger; T. A. Peterson; Michael J. Erickson; B. Bolon; Chad Geppert; Chris Leighton; P. A. Crowell
Physical Review B | 2013
S. D. Snyder; T. Dunn; Michael J. Erickson; J. Kinney; Yeonbae Lee; J. K. Nelson; A. M. Goldman
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012
Te-Yu Chen; Michael J. Erickson; Andrew T. Galkiewicz; Chris Leighton; P. A. Crowell
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012
Stephen Snyder; Michael J. Erickson; Joseph Kinney; Yeonbae Lee; Jj Nelson; A. M. Goldman
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012
Yu Pan; K.K. Kohli; Robert Fraleigh; Andrew Balk; D. Finkel; Sulin Zhang; J. Li; Ian Gilbert; Paul E. Lammert; Rajiv Misra; V. H. Crespi; P. Schiffer; Nitin Samarth; Michael J. Erickson; Chris Leighton