Artificial Ferromagnetic Nanostructures: An Experimental Platform for Magnonics
CIC nanoGUNE Seminars
- Speaker
-
Prof. Adekunle Adeyeye, National University Singapore
- When
-
2013/06/20
13:00 - Place
- nanoGUNE seminar room, Tolosa Hiribidea 76, Donostia - San Sebastian
- Add to calendar
- iCal
**
**
**Host** : Paolo Vavassori
Artificial ferromagnetic nanostructures with periodic lateral contrasts in
magnetization are known as “magnonic crystals†(MCs), conceived as the
magnetic analogue of photonic crystals. Recently, there is growing interest in
the fundamental understanding of the spin wave propagation in MCs because of
their huge potential in a wide range of applications such as microwave
resonators, filters and spin wave logic devices. With advances in controlled
nanofabrication techniques, it is now possible to synthesize high-quality
periodic bi-component magnetic nanostructures with precisely controlled
dimensions. The band spectrum of MCs consists of allowed states magnonic bands
and forbidden states (magnonic gaps) that can be tuned by magnetic fields or
geometrical parameters. We have shown that MCs represent a perfect system for
studying excitations on disordered periodical lattices because of the
possibility of controlled variation in the degree of disorder by varying the
applied magnetic field [1]. We have also demonstrated functionality of
magnetic logic based on a reconfigurable MC in the form of a meander-type
ferromagnetic nanowire [2]. A ferromagnetic resonance method employing a
microscopic coplanar waveguide was used to detect the logic state of the
structure coded in its magnetic ground state.
This talk will be divided into 3 parts: the first part will focus on
strategies we have developed for synthesizing high-quality 1-D and 2-D MCs
using deep ultra-violet lithography technique at 248 nm exposure wavelength.
Using resolution enhancement techniques, we have fabricated arrays of
ferromagnetic nanostructures with lateral dimensions and inter-element spacing
below the conventional resolution limit of optical lithography tools. The
second part will focus on results of our recent systematic investigation of
both the static and dynamic properties of MCs using a combination of magneto-
optical Kerr effect measurements, magnetic force microscopy, broadband
ferromagnetic resonance spectroscopy, magneto transport measurements and
micromagnetic simulations. In the third part, the concept of binary magnetic
nanostructures will be introduced and their potential application in magnetic
logic devices demonstrated.
[1] J. Ding, M. Kostylev, and A. O. Adeyeye Physical Review Letters 107,047205
(2011).
[2] J. Ding, M. Kostylev, and A. O. Adeyeye Applied Physics Letters 100,
062401 (2012).
**Biography**
Adekunle Adeyeye received his B.Sc. degree in Physics from the University of
Ilorin, Nigeria (1990), MPhil (Microelectronic Engineering and semiconductor
Physics) and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Cambridge (UK), in 1993 and
1996, respectively. He was elected a Junior Research Fellow at Trinity
College, University of Cambridge in 1996. He then worked as a Senior Research
Engineer at the Data Storage Institute, Singapore in 1997, before returning to
Cambridge to take up his fellowship at the Nanoscale Science Laboratory. Prof.
Adeyeye joined the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, National
University of Singapore as an assistant professor in 2000. He was promoted to
associate professor with tenure in 2006 and full professor in July 2012. Prof.
Adeyeye is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics, Fellow of the Institute of
Nanotechnology and Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineering. He has published more than 250 technical articles in peer-
reviewed journals, including book chapters, review articles, and invited
topical review in the areas of nanomagnetism.