Spin Torque Arising from the Spin Hall Effect within Ferromagnets
ORAL
Abstract
Recent spin-pumping measurements have indicated that ferromagnetic materials such as permalloy can possess a significant inverse spin Hall effect, by which they convert an applied spin current to a charge current. We report experimental investigations of the inverse phenomenon, using the direct spin Hall effect within a ferromagnetic material to generate a spin current that can be used to apply a spin transfer torque to another nearby magnetic layer. Specifically, we measure spin-orbit-induced torques generated by an in-plane current in pinned ferromagnet/spacer/free ferromagnet multilayer structures. We quantify the strength of the torque using both non-resonant second harmonic magnetization tilting measurements and spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance. We focus on the dependence of the direction and strength of the spin torque on the relative orientation of the fixed-layer magnetization and the current.
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Authors
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Jonathan Gibbons
Department of Physics, Cornell University
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Robert Buhrman
School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University, Cornell Univ
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Daniel Ralph
Department of Physics, Cornell University, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 14853, Cornell Univ, Cornell University, Cornell Unversity