4.8 Article

Spin Seebeck mechanical force

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10625-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JST-ERATO Spin Quantum Rectification Project from JST, Japan [JPMJER1402]
  2. MEXT, Japan [26103005, 18H04311, 18H04215, 26247063, 16H04023, 17H02927, 15K05153, 17H04806]
  3. GP-Spin at Tohoku University
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H04215, 15K05153, 18H04311, 17H04806, 17H02927, 16H04023] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Electric current has been used to send electricity to far distant places. On the other hand, spin current, a flow of electron spin, can in principle also send angular momentum to distant places. In a magnet, there is a universal spin carrier called a spin wave, a wave-type excitation of magnetization. Since spin waves exhibit a long propagation length, it should be able to send angular momentum that can generate torque and force at a distant place: a new function of magnets. Here we observe mechanical angular momentum transmission and force generation due to spin waves injected into Y3Fe5O12 by the spin-Seebeck effect. The spin-wave current, transmitted through a Y3Fe5O12 micro cantilever, was found to create a mechanical force on the cantilever as a non-local reaction of the spin-Seebeck effect. Spin-wave current can be generated remotely even in open circuits, and it can be used to drive micro mechanical devices.

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