Group of Surface Magnetism / Ferromagnetic Resonance Laboratory
Zdenek Frait
Our lab is engaged in magnetic spectroscopy of low-energy
magnons in microwave region. This methods has a couple of
pros in comparison
to others methods of characterization of magnetic materials:
- FMR does not disturb energetical state of sample, because
energy of microwave photon is approx. 0.6 K
- FMR measures effective volume magnetization directly, not
the magnetic moment of the sample.
- FMR can determine lot of interesting physical properties,
e.g. g-factor (ratio of the spin and orbital magnetism), damping
constant (excited states lifetime), exchange interaction
and anisotropies of different origin, interlayer exchange
energy in superstructures.
- FMR is very sensitive. Its use is highly convenient
for nowadays popular low-dimension magnetism study
(thin films, multilayers, wires, nanostructures).
Facility
- classical electromagnet Varian 3800 (field -1 to 31 kG)
- unique FMR spectrometer with very broad frequency range 8-104 GHz
with lot of options:
- options for anisotropy measurement (in-plane, out-of-plane)
- options for magnetoelastic study (stressing of the sample)
- cryostat for low-temperature measurement (down to 4 K)
- furnace for high-temperature measurement (up to 700 K)
- high-precision system for frequency measurement (up to 100 GHz with
8 digit precision)
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Photo by Petr Sturc
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Research
Thin films, multilayers, nanostructures, patterned structures
These topics are our main field of interest. We study both
theoretically and practically extensive range of thin films structures.
Mainly we are interested in Fe/Au, Co/Au, Co/Pt, Fe/Cr, Fe/Si,
FeSi/Si and some Fe/RE systems. Experimentally we investigate
excitation and propagation of magnons in these metallic ferromagnets
and influence of exchange stiffness, anisotropy, interlayer exchange,
damping, g-factor etc. Some of these results are evaluated using
our own original theories of excitation of magnons.
Amorphous and nanocrystalline materials
In cooperations mainly with other laboratories we study broad set of
nanocrystallic materials mainly
FeNi, FeCo and CuCo alloys. We are interested in its magnetoelastic
properties, origin of surface anisotropy and surface spin-wave modes
generation.
Applications-GMR, sensors
In our lab are intensively studied materials for potential
application as GMR magnetic sensors. GMR effect in Fe/Si,
FeSi/Si and FeCr bilayers and multilayers and wedges is investigated.
As a by-product we have develop an original method for contactless
differential measurement of GMR effect at microwave frequencies.
Cooperations
- Institute of Electrical Engineering, Slovak Academy of
Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia
- AG
Festkörperspektroskopie, Fakultät für Physik und Astronomie, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany
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Institut für Halbleitertechnik, Technische Universität Carolo-Wilhelmina, Braunschweig, Germany
- Department of Physics, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA
- Department of
Physics, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada
Grants
- 2000-2004: Correlation of structure and magnetism in novel nanoscale magnetic particles
Human Potential-Research and Training Network, European Community
- 1998-2000: Composite nanogranular magnetic materials
Grant Agency of Czech Republic 202/98/1292
- 2000-2003: Garnet thin films with minimum losses
National Science Foundation (US)
Recent publications
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J.F. Cochran, A. Kurn and Z. Frait:
A comparative study of FMR and Brillouin light scattering on amorphous
Fe40Ni40B20
J. Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, Volume 210, Issue 1-3, February
2000
- Z. Frait, P.Sturc, K. Temst , Y. Bruynseraede, I.Vavra:
Microwave and d.c. differential giant magnetoresistance study of
iron/chromium superlattices
Solid State Communications 112 (1999) 569-573
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