Large enhancement of spin-flip scattering efficiency at Y3Fe5O12/Pt interfaces due to vertical confinement
Magnons, the quanta of spin angular momentum, can be excited in magnetic insulators by spin-flip scattering processes originated from currents applied to a heavy metal overlayer. The efficiency to generate non-equilibrium magnons across interfaces is parametrized by the spin conductance gs, a phenom...
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Zusammenfassung: | Magnons, the quanta of spin angular momentum, can be excited in magnetic
insulators by spin-flip scattering processes originated from currents applied
to a heavy metal overlayer. The efficiency to generate non-equilibrium magnons
across interfaces is parametrized by the spin conductance gs, a
phenomenological constant that is considered to be dependent on thermal
magnons. Here, we investigate non-linear magnetoresistance phenomena originated
in Pt due to current-driven nonequilibrium magnons in Y3Fe5O12 (YIG).
Remarkably, we find that spin-flip scattering processes are dominated by
subthermal magnons at room temperature, resulting in a large modulation of gs
with the magnetic field and YIG thickness. Concretely, we find that decreasing
the YIG thickness from 100 to 10 nm increases gs by a factor 30 and observe
that the magnetic field exponentially suppresses the magnon generation
efficiency. These findings challenge current understanding on gs and indicate
that electrically-driven magnonic effects such as damping compensation and
magnon condensation can be largely boosted by device miniaturization. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.19247 |