Home | About Journal | Web Links | E-mail Alerts | RSS RSS Icon | Browse
Previous Article Next Article

Thermal equilibration and thermally induced spin currents in a thin-film ferromagnet on a substrate

Source: Phys. Rev. B 85, 035446 (2012); http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.85.035446

Published 30 January 2012

PACS
  • 85.75.-d
    Magnetoelectronics; spintronics
  • 85.80.Lp
    Magnetothermal devices
  • 73.50.Jt
    Galvanomagnetic and other magnetotransport effects in thin films
  • 44.15.+a
    Channel and internal heat flow
  • YEAR: 2011
PUBLICATION DATA
ISSN:
1553-9644 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef APS
Matthew R. Sears and Wayne M. Saslow
Department of Physics, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-4242, USA
Recent spin-Seebeck experiments on thin ferromagnetic films apply a temperature difference DeltaTx along the length x and measure a (transverse) voltage difference DeltaVy along the width y. The connection between these involves: (1) thermal equilibration between sample and substrate, (2) spin currents along the height (or thickness) z, and (3) the measured voltage difference DeltaVy. The present work models in detail the first of these steps, and outlines how to obtain the other two. In 1D, thermal equilibration between the magnons and phonons in the sample as well as additional equilibration between the sample and the substrate leads to two surface modes with lengths lambda to provide thermal equilibration. Increasing the coupling between the two modes increases the longer mode length and decreases the shorter mode length. In 2D, the applied thermal gradient along x leads to a thermal gradient along z that varies as sinh(x/lambda), which produces fluxes along z of the up- and down-spin carriers, and gradients of their associated magnetoelectrochemical potentials [overline  mu ][up-arrow],[down-arrow], which vary as sinh(x/lambda). There is also an infinite spectrum of shorter lengths lambda that are geometrically determined. By the inverse spin Hall effect, the spin current along z can produce a transverse voltage difference DeltaVy that also varies as sinh(x/lambda). This is consistent with experiments if the longest lambda is comparable to or larger than the sample length L, and the shorter lambda's are smaller than the separation between the input or output lead and the nearest voltage probe. In this model, even seemingly linear voltage profiles are due to a surface mode.
History: Received 8 August 2011; published 30 January 2012
Digital Object Identifier: http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.85.035446
ADVERTISEMENT