English

Origin of the Inverse Spin Switch Effect in Superconducting Spin Valves

Superconductivity 2009-03-03 v1

Abstract

The resistance of a ferromagnet/superconductor/ferromagnet (F/S/F) spin valve near its superconducting transition temperature, TcT_c, depends on the state of magnetization of the F layers. This phenomenon, known as spin switch effect (SSE), manifests itself as a resistance difference between parallel (RPR_P) and antiparallel (RAPR_{AP}) configurations of the F layers. Both standard (RP>RAPR_{P}>R_{AP}) and inverse (RP<RAPR_{P}<R_{AP}) SSE have been observed in different superconducting spin valve systems, but the origin of the inverse SSE was not understood. Here we report observation of a coexistence of the standard and inverse SSE in Ni81_{81}Fe19_{19}/Nb/Ni81_{81}Fe19_{19}/Ir25_{25}Mn75_{75} spin valves. Our measurements reveal that the inverse SSE arises from a dissipative flow of vortices induced by stray magnetic fields from magnetostatically coupled N\'eel domain wall pairs in the F layers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0903.0044,
  title  = {Origin of the Inverse Spin Switch Effect in Superconducting Spin Valves},
  author = {J. Zhu and X. Cheng and C. Boone and I. N. Krivorotov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.0044},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

5 pages, 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:16:46.799Z