Spintronics research shows material’s magnetic properties can predict how a spin current changes with temperature

Phys.org  April 23, 2024 An international team of researchers (Japan, Australia) examined magnon spin currents in the ferrimagnetic garnet Tb3Fe5O12 with 4f electrons through the spin-Seebeck effect and neutron scattering measurements. The compound showed a magnetic compensation, where the spin-Seebeck signal reversed above and below K. Unpolarized neutron scattering unveiled two major magnon branches with finite energy gaps which were well explained in the framework of spin-wave theory. Their temperature dependencies and the direction of the precession motion of magnetic moments defined using polarized neutrons explained the reversal at and decay of the spin-Seebeck signals at low temperatures. According to […]

Better neutron mirrors can reveal the inner secrets of matter

Science Daily  February 29, 2024 The state-of-the-art multilayer polarizing neutron optics has limitations, particularly low specular reflectivity and polarization at higher scattering vectors/angles, and the requirement of high external magnetic fields to saturate the polarizer magnetization. An international team of researchers (Sweden, Iceland, Switzerland, Germany) showed that, by incorporating 11B4C into Fe/Si multilayers, amorphization and smooth interfaces could be achieved, yielding higher neutron reflectivity, less diffuse scattering, and higher polarization. Magnetic coercivity was eliminated, and magnetic saturation could be reached at low external fields. According to the researchers this approach offered prospects for substantial improvement in polarizing neutron optics with […]