Emergent Magnonic Materials: Challenges and Opportunities

Materials (Basel). 2023 Sep 20;16(18):6299. doi: 10.3390/ma16186299.

Abstract

Advances in information technology are hindered by energy dissipation from Joule losses associated with charge transport. In contrast, the process of information based on spin waves propagation (magnons) in magnetic materials is dissipationless. Low damping of spin wave excitations is essential to control the propagation length of magnons. Ferrimagnetic Y3Fe5O12 garnets (YIG) exhibit the lowest magnetic damping constants. However, to attain the lowest damping constant, epitaxial growth of YIG on single crystal substrates of Gd3Ga5O12 at elevated temperatures is required, which hinders their CMOS integration in electronic devices. Furthermore, their low saturation magnetization and magnetocrystalline anisotropy are challenging for nanoscale device applications. In the search for alternative material systems, polycrystalline ferromagnetic Co25Fe75 alloy films and ferrimagnetic spinel ferrites, such as MgAl0.5Fe1.5O4 (MAFO), have emerged as potential candidates. Their damping constants are comparable, although they are at least one order of magnitude higher than YIG's. However, Co25Fe75 alloy thin film growth is CMOS compatible, and its magnon diffusion length is 20× longer than in MAFO. In addition, MAFO requires epitaxial growth on lattice-matched MgAl2O4 substrates. We discuss the material properties that control the Gilbert damping constant in CoxFe1-x alloys and MAFO and conclude that CoxFe1-x alloy thin films bring us closer to the realization of the exploitation of spin waves for magnonics.

Keywords: CoFe alloy thin films; Gilbert damping; MgAlFeO spinel ferrites; magnons.

Publication types

  • Review