Ultrashort Spin Waves Emission by an Antiferromagnetic Domain Wall Driven by Spin Current
ORAL
Abstract
We show that a domain wall (DW) in AFM with an anisotropy or DMI, driven by spin current, can be a source of such propagating SWs with high frequencies and shorter wavelengths, comparable to the exchange length of the AFM. In the proposed generator, the spin current, with polarization directed along the principal crystal axis, excites the precession of the Néel vector within the DW. The threshold current is defined by the value of the in-plane anisotropy, and the frequency of the DW precession is tuneable by the strength of the spin current. We show that the above precession of the DW leads to robust emission of high-frequency propagating SWs into the AFM strip with very short wavelengths comparable to the exchange length, which is hard to achieve by any other method.
[1] O. Gomonay et al., Nat. Physics 14, 213 (2018)
[2] R. Khymyn et al., Sci. Rep. 7, 43705 (2017); O. Sulymenko et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 8, 064007 (2017)
–
Publication: Planned paper: Ultrashort Spin Waves Emission by an Antiferromagnetic Domain Wall Driven by Spin Current
Presenters
-
Roman Khymyn
University of Gothenburg, Sweden, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden
Authors
-
Roman Khymyn
University of Gothenburg, Sweden, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden
-
Roman Ovcharov
University of Gothenburg, Sweden
-
Boris Ivanov
Institute of Magnetism, NASU and MESU of Ukraine, Institute of Magnetism, Kiev, Institute of Magnetism of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine
-
Johan Åkerman
Goteborg Univ, University of Gothenburg, 1Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 41296 Gothenburg, Sweden., University of Gothenburg, Sweden, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden