English

Spin wave imaging in atomically designed nanomagnets

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2015-09-22 v1 Strongly Correlated Electrons

Abstract

The spin dynamics of all ferromagnetic materials are governed by two types of collective excitations: spin waves and domain walls. The fundamental processes underlying these collective modes, such as exchange interactions and magnetic anisotropy, all originate at the atomic scale; yet, conventional probing techniques, based on neutron and photon scattering, provide high resolution in reciprocal space, and thereby poor spatial resolution. Here we present direct imaging of spin waves in individual chains of ferromagnetically coupled S=2S=2 Fe atoms, assembled one by one on a Cu2_2N surface using a scanning tunnelling microscope. We are able to map the spin dynamics of these designer nanomagnets with atomic resolution, in two complementary ways. First, atom to atom variations of the amplitude of the quantized spin wave excitations, predicted by theory, are probed using inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy. Second, we observe slow stochastic switching between two opposite magnetisation states, whose rate varies strongly depending on the location of the tip along the chain. Our observations, combined with model calculations, reveal that switches of the chain are initiated by a spin wave excited state which has its antinodes at the edges of the chain, followed by a domain wall shifting through the chain from one end to the other. This approach opens the way towards atomic scale imaging of other types of spin excitations, such as spinons and fractional end-states, in engineered spin chains.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1403.5890,
  title  = {Spin wave imaging in atomically designed nanomagnets},
  author = {A. Spinelli and B. Bryant and F. Delgado and J. Fernández-Rossier and A. F. Otte},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1403.5890},
  year   = {2015}
}

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Supplementary information included

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