4.6 Article

Uncorrelated magnetic domains in decoupled SrFe12O19/Co hard/soft bilayers

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 54, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6463/abc0be

Keywords

strontium ferrite; hard; soft bilayers; magnetic energy; microscopy; XMCD-PEEM; micromagnetic simulations

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) [MAT2017-86450-C4-1-R, RTI2018-095303-B-C51, RTI2018-095303-B-C53, RTI2018-095303-A-C52, FIS2017-82415-R]
  2. European Comission [720853]
  3. Regional Government of Madrid [S2018/NMT-4321]
  4. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (MICINN) through the 'Juan de la Cierva' Program [FJC2018-035532-I]

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Composites of magnetically hard and soft phases play crucial roles in various applications, with the magnetic coupling between these phases influencing the macroscopic properties of the materials. Studies on a hard/soft bilayer system show significant differences in magnetization direction and magnetic domain patterns between the hard magnetic oxide and soft metallic overlayer. The results suggest that low degrees of exchange-coupling can prevent substantial softening of the composite and lead to the alignment of soft and hard magnetic moments.
Composites of magnetically hard and soft phases are present in multiple and diverse applications, ranging from bulk permanent magnets in motors and generators to state-of-the-art recording media devices. The nature of the magnetic coupling between the hard and soft phases is of great technological relevance, as the macroscopic properties of the functional composite material ultimately depend on the atomic-scale interactions between phases. In this work, the hard/soft bilayer system SrFe12O19/Co has been studied based on photoemission electron microscopy combined with x-ray absorption and magnetic circular dichroism. Our experiments show that the magnetization of the hard magnetic oxide has a direction perpendicular to the layer plane, whereas the magnetization of the soft metallic overlayer remains in-plane. As a consequence, the magnetic domain patterns observed for the hard and soft phases are very different and completely uncorrelated to one another, indicating that no soft spins align with the hard phase by pure magnetodipolar arguments. The results are understood as the consequence of an absence of exchange-coupling between phases, in a scenario in which the shape anisotropy of the soft layer overcomes the Zeeman energy of the perpendicular magnetic field generated by the hard ferrite. Micromagnetic simulations of our system predict that low degrees of exchange-coupling effectively prevent substantial softening of the composite and lead to the alignment of soft and hard magnetic moments. A strategy thus emerges for the development of future hard-soft magnets, based on minimizing the degree of exchange-coupling while avoiding complete uncoupling.

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