Pseudo-One-Dimensional Magnonic Crystals for High-Frequency Nanoscale Devices

Banerjee, Chandrima ; Choudhury, Samiran ; Sinha, Jaivardhan ; Barman, Anjan (2017) Pseudo-One-Dimensional Magnonic Crystals for High-Frequency Nanoscale Devices Physical Review Applied, 8 (1). ISSN 2331-7019

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.8.014036

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.8.014036

Abstract

The synthetic magnonic crystals (i.e., periodic composites consisting of different magnetic materials) form one fascinating class of emerging research field, which aims to command the process and flow of information by means of spin waves, such as in magnonic waveguides. One of the intriguing features of magnonic crystals is the presence and tunability of band gaps in the spin-wave spectrum, where the high attenuation of the frequency bands can be utilized for frequency-dependent control on the spin waves. However, to find a feasible way of band tuning in terms of a realistic integrated device is still a challenge. Here, we introduce an array of asymmetric saw-tooth-shaped width-modulated nanoscale ferromagnetic waveguides forming a pseudo-one-dimensional magnonic crystal. The frequency dispersion of collective modes measured by the Brillouin light-scattering technique is compared with the band diagram obtained by numerically solving the eigenvalue problem derived from the linearized Landau-Lifshitz magnetic torque equation. We find that the magnonic band-gap width, position, and the slope of dispersion curves are controllable by changing the angle between the spin-wave propagation channel and the magnetic field. The calculated profiles of the dynamic magnetization reveal that the corrugation at the lateral boundary of the waveguide effectively engineers the edge modes, which forms the basis of the interactive control in magnonic circuits. The results represent a prospective direction towards managing the internal field distribution as well as the dispersion properties, which find potential applications in dynamic spin-wave filters and magnonic waveguides in the gigahertz frequency range.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Physical Society.
ID Code:116200
Deposited On:07 Apr 2021 10:32
Last Modified:07 Apr 2021 10:32

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