Timothy Phung
IBM
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Publication
Featured researches published by Timothy Phung.
Nature Communications | 2016
Kai-Uwe Demasius; Timothy Phung; Weifeng Zhang; Brian Hughes; See-Hun Yang; A. J. Kellock; Wei Han; Aakash Pushp; Stuart S. P. Parkin
The origin of spin–orbit torques, which are generated by the conversion of charge-to-spin currents in non-magnetic materials, is of considerable debate. One of the most interesting materials is tungsten, for which large spin–orbit torques have been found in thin films that are stabilized in the A15 (β-phase) structure. Here we report large spin Hall angles of up to approximately –0.5 by incorporating oxygen into tungsten. While the incorporation of oxygen into the tungsten films leads to significant changes in their microstructure and electrical resistivity, the large spin Hall angles measured are found to be remarkably insensitive to the oxygen-doping level (12–44%). The invariance of the spin Hall angle for higher oxygen concentrations with the bulk properties of the films suggests that the spin–orbit torques in this system may originate dominantly from the interface rather than from the interior of the films.
Nature Physics | 2013
Aakash Pushp; Timothy Phung; C. T. Rettner; Brian Hughes; See-Hun Yang; Luc Thomas; Stuart S. P. Parkin
When a domain wall of a given chirality is injected into a magnetic nanowire, its trajectory through a branched network of Y-shaped nanowire junctions—such as a honeycomb lattice, for instance—can be pre-determined. This property has implications for data storage and processing.
Physical Review B | 2015
Amir Capua; See-Hun Yang; Timothy Phung; Stuart S. P. Parkin
Magnetization dynamics are strongly influenced by damping. An effective damping constant {\alpha}eff is often determined experimentally from the spectral linewidth of the free induction decay of the magnetization after the system is excited to its non-equilibrium state. Such an {\alpha}eff, however, reflects both intrinsic damping as well as inhomogeneous broadening. In this paper we compare measurements of the magnetization dynamics in ultrathin non-epitaxial films having perpendicular magnetic anisotropy using two different techniques, time-resolved magneto optical Kerr effect (TRMOKE) and hybrid optical-electrical ferromagnetic resonance (OFMR). By using an external magnetic field that is applied at very small angles to the film plane in the TRMOKE studies, we develop an explicit closed-form analytical expression for the TRMOKE spectral linewidth and show how this can be used to reliably extract the intrinsic Gilbert damping constant. The damping constant determined in this way is in excellent agreement with that determined from the OFMR method on the same samples. Our studies indicate that the asymptotic high-field approach that is often used in the TRMOKE method to distinguish the intrinsic damping from the effective damping may result in significant error, because such high external magnetic fields are required to make this approach valid that they are out of reach. The error becomes larger the lower is the intrinsic damping constant, and thus may account for the anomalously high damping constants that are often reported in TRMOKE studies. In conventional ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) studies, inhomogeneous contributions can be readily distinguished from intrinsic damping contributions from the magnetic field dependence of the FMR linewidth. Using the analogous approach, we show how reliable values of the intrinsic damping can be extracted from TRMOKE.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Timothy Phung; Aakash Pushp; C. T. Rettner; Brian Hughes; See-Hun Yang; Stuart S. P. Parkin
We report on the experimental demonstration of a magnetic domain wall logic device—a 2 bit demultiplexer or a biplexer—that sorts vortex domain walls, created in the input branch, into one of the two output branches of a Y-shaped magnetic nanostructure based on their chiralities. We show that this sorting behavior is insensitive to the angle that the two output branches of the Y-shaped nanostructure subtend with each other, which we attribute to a topological protection stemming from the constituent fractional topological defects of the domain wall.
Science Advances | 2017
Chirag Garg; See-Hun Yang; Timothy Phung; Aakash Pushp; Stuart S. P. Parkin
The velocity of domain walls driven by chiral spin-orbit torques is up to 10 times faster around right- than left-handed bends. The use of current pulses to move domain walls along nanowires is one of the most exciting developments in spintronics over the past decade. We show that changing the sign of the curvature of a nanowire changes the speed of chiral Néel domain walls in perpendicularly magnetized nanowires by up to a factor of 10. The domain walls have an increased or decreased velocity in wires of a given curvature, independent of the domain wall chirality and the sign of the current-induced spin-orbit torques. Thus, adjacent domain walls move at different speeds. For steady motion of domain walls along the curved nanowire, the torque must increase linearly with the radius, which thereby results in a width-dependent tilting of the domain wall. We show that by using synthetic antiferromagnetic nanowires, the influence of the curvature on the domain wall’s velocity is eliminated, and all domain walls move together, emphasizing the use of such structures for spintronic applications.
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Jie Zhang; Timothy Phung; Aakash Pushp; Yari Ferrante; Jaewoo Jeong; C. T. Rettner; Brian Hughes; See-Hun Yang; Yong Jiang; Stuart S. P. Parkin
Heusler compounds are of interest as electrode materials for use in magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) due to their half metallic character, which leads to 100% spin polarization and high tunneling magnetoresistance. Most work to date has focused on the improvements to tunneling magnetoresistance that can stem from the use of Heusler electrodes, while there is much less work investigating the influence of Heusler electrodes on the spin transfer torque properties of MTJs. Here, we investigate the bias dependence of the anti-damping like and field-like spin transfer torque components in both symmetric (Co2MnSi/MgO/Co2MnSi) and asymmetric (Co2MnSi/MgO/CoFe) structure Heusler based MTJs using spin transfer torque ferromagnetic resonance. We find that while the damping like torque is linear with respect to bias for both MTJ structures, the asymmetric MTJ structure has an additional linear component to the ordinarily quadratic field like torque bias dependence and that these results can be accounted for by a free...
Nano Letters | 2018
Jie Zhang; Chirag Garg; Timothy Phung; C. T. Rettner; Brian Hughes; See-Hun Yang; Yong Jiang; Stuart S. P. Parkin
Three-terminal spintronic memory devices based on the controlled manipulation of the proximate magnetization of a magnetic nanoelement using spin-orbit torques (SOTs) have attracted growing interest recently. These devices are nonvolatile, can operate at high speeds with low error rates, and have essentially infinite endurance, making them promising candidates for high-speed cache memory. Typically, the magnetization and spin polarization in these devices are collinear to one another, leading to a finite incubation time associated with the switching process. While switching can also be achieved when the magnetization easy axis and spin polarization are noncollinear, this requires the application of an external magnetic field for deterministic switching. Here, we demonstrate a novel SOT scheme that exploits non-uniform micromagnetic states to achieve deterministic switching when the spin polarization and magnetic moment axis are noncollinear to one another in the absence of external magnetic field. We also explore the use of a highly efficient SOT generator, oxygen-doped tungsten in the three-terminal device geometry, confirming its -50% spin Hall angle. Lastly, we illustrate how this scheme may potentially be useful for nanomagnetic logic applications.
Nano Letters | 2018
Chirag Garg; Aakash Pushp; See-Hun Yang; Timothy Phung; Brian Hughes; C. T. Rettner; Stuart S. P. Parkin
Recent developments in spin-orbit torques allow for highly efficient current-driven domain wall (DW) motion in nanowires with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Here, we show that chiral DWs can be driven into nonequilibrium states that can persist over tens of nanoseconds in Y-shaped magnetic nanowire junctions that have an input and two symmetric outputs. A single DW that is injected into the input splits and travels at very different velocities in the two output branches until it reaches its steady-state velocity. We find that this is due to the disparity between the fast temporal evolution of the spin current derived spin-orbit torque and a much-slower temporal evolution of the DMI-derived torque. Changing the DW polarity inverts the velocity asymmetry in the two output branches, a property that we use to demonstrate the sorting of domains.
Nature Communications | 2017
Amir Capua; C. T. Rettner; See-Hun Yang; Timothy Phung; Stuart S. P. Parkin
Rabi oscillations describe the process whereby electromagnetic radiation interacts coherently with spin states in a non-equilibrium interaction. To date, Rabi oscillations have not been studied in one of the most common spin ensembles in nature: spins in ferromagnets. Here, using a combination of femtosecond laser pulses and microwave excitations, we report the classical analogue of Rabi oscillations in ensemble-averaged spins of a ferromagnet. The microwave stimuli are shown to extend the coherence-time resulting in resonant spin amplification. The results we present in a dense magnetic system are qualitatively similar to those reported previously in semiconductors which have five orders of magnitude fewer spins and which require resonant optical excitations to spin-polarize the ensemble. Our study is a step towards connecting concepts used in quantum processing with spin-transport effects in ferromagnets. For example, coherent control may become possible without the complications of driving an electromagnetic field but rather by using spin-polarized currents.
device research conference | 2014
Timothy Phung; Aakash Pushp; C. T. Rettner; Brian Hughes; Shang-Hua Yang; Stuart Stephen Papworth Parkin
The authors discuss the dynamics of domain walls in thin permalloy magnetic nanowires through the anisotropic magnetoresistance effect. Upon the introduction of a single DW into the magnetic nanowire, only one resonant mode was observed. Two resonant modes were found in coupled DWs.