Origins of transverse voltages generated by applied thermal gradients and applied electric fields in ferrimagnetic-insulator/heavy-metal bilayers
ORAL
Abstract
We compare thermal-gradient-driven transverse voltages in ferrimagnetic-insulator/heavy-metal bilayers (Tm3Fe5O12 /W and Tm3Fe5O12 /Pt) to corresponding electrically-driven transverse resistances at and above room temperature. We find for Tm3Fe5O12/W that the thermal and electrical effects can be explained by a common spin-current detection mechanism, the physics underlying spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR). However, for Tm3Fe5O12 /Pt, this is not the case – the ratio of the electrically-driven transverse voltages (planar Hall signal/anomalous Hall signal) is much larger than the ratio of corresponding thermal-gradient signals, a result which is therefore very different from expectations for a SMR-based mechanism alone. We ascribe this difference to a proximity-induced magnetic layer at the Tm3Fe5O12/Pt interface.
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Presenters
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Rakshit Jain
Cornell University
Authors
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Rakshit Jain
Cornell University
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ARNAB BOSE
Cornell University
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Jackson J Bauer
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
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Robert A Buhrman
Cornell University
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Caroline A Ross
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
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Daniel C Ralph
Cornell University