4.6 Article

Nanoscale imaging of Gilbert damping using signal amplitude mapping

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
Volume 118, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0023455

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Center for Emergent Materials (CEM), an NSF [DMR-2011876]
  2. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001304]

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FMRFM is a powerful scanned probe technique that can be used to measure Gilbert damping in ferromagnetic materials; spatially resolved imaging of Gilbert damping can be achieved by measuring the LM resonance cone angle using the LM resonance peak height; this approach allows determination of damping through field-swept FMRFM at a single excitation frequency.
Ferromagnetic resonance force microscopy (FMRFM) is a powerful scanned probe technique that uses sub-micrometer-scale, spatially localized standing spin wave modes (LMs) to perform local ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) measurements. Here, we show the spatially resolved imaging of Gilbert damping in a ferromagnetic material (FM) using FMRFM. Typically damping is measured from the FMR linewidth. We demonstrate an approach to image the spatial variation of Gilbert damping utilizing the LM resonance peak height to measure the LM resonance cone angle. This approach enables determination of damping through field-swept FMRFM at a single excitation frequency. The extreme force sensitivity of similar to 2 fN at room temperature can resolve changes of Gilbert damping as small as similar to 2 x 10 - 4 at 2GHz, corresponding to similar to 0.16Oe in FMR linewidth resolution. This high sensitivity, high spatial resolution, and single frequency imaging of Gilbert damping creates the opportunity to study spin interactions at the interface between an insulating FM and a small volume of nonmagnetic material such as atomically thin two-dimensional materials.

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