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Quantiative X-ray Imaging of Spin Accumulation due to the Spin Hall Effect in Ni<i><sub>x</sub></i>Cu<sub>1-<i>x</i></sub> Nanowires

ORAL

Abstract

We recently reported a spin Hall ratio θSH = 1.05 ± 0.18 in Ni60Cu40, an alloy that is nonmagnetic at room temperature, based on FMR measurements of unpatterned Ni80Fe20 films deposited in a bilayer with the alloy [1]. Like previous studies of spin Hall effect (SHE) in heavy metals such as Pt and W, this work inferred spin accumulation indirectly, in this case from its effect on the FMR resonance. An alloy containing Ni enables scanning transmission x-ray microscopy (STXM) to directly image spin accumulation using circularly polarized x-rays tuned to the Ni L3 absorption edge. Importantly, this technique can quantify the spin accumulation without resorting to a theoretical model of spin transport. In wires of Ni60Cu35Al5 with a cross section ≈ 80 nm x 30 nm and driven at a current density ≈ 5 x 1011 A/m2, fabricated on Si3N4 membranes, we observed spin polarization along each wire edge in normal-incidence STXM images. The amount of spin accumulation is consistent with θSH ≈ 1 and it obeys three symmetries expected for SHE measured via STXM: 1) opposite sign on opposite edges of the wire, 2) opposite sign with reversal of the driving current, and 3) opposite sign with opposite x-ray helicity.
[1] M.W. Keller et al., Phys. Rev. B 99, 214411 (2019).

Presenters

  • Mark Keller

    National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder

Authors

  • Mark Keller

    National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder

  • Monika Arora

    National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, Quantum Electromagnetics Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Justin Shaw

    National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, Quantum Electromagnetics Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Thomas Silva

    National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder, Quantum Electromagnetics Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Bastien Dassonneville

    Laboratoire de Physique des Solides Orsay, U. Paris Sud, U. Paris Saclay, CNRS, France, National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder

  • Joachim Graefe

    Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems

  • Markus Weigand

    Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin fur Materialien und Energie