4.8 Article

Switchable hardening of a ferromagnet at fixed temperature

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0910575107

Keywords

domain reversal; ferromagnetism; magnetic storage; quantum tunneling; random fields

Funding

  1. DOE Basic Energy Sciences [DEFG02-99ER45789]
  2. United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
  3. NSF Materials Research Science & Engineering Center

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The intended use of a magnetic material, from information storage to power conversion, depends crucially on its domain structure, traditionally crafted during materials synthesis. By contrast, we show that an external magnetic field, applied transverse to the preferred magnetization of a model disordered uniaxial ferromagnet, is an isothermal regulator of domain pinning. At elevated temperatures, near the transition into the paramagnet, modest transverse fields increase the pinning, stabilize the domain structure, and harden the magnet, until a point where the field induces quantum tunneling of the domain walls and softens the magnet. At low temperatures, tunneling completely dominates the domain dynamics and provides an interpretation of the quantum phase transition in highly disordered magnets as a localization/delocalization transition for domain walls. While the energy scales of the rare earth ferromagnet studied here restrict the effects to cryogenic temperatures, the principles discovered are general and should be applicable to existing classes of highly anisotropic ferromagnets with ordering at room temperature or above.

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