Interface-Induced Phenomena in Magnetism.

Journal: Reviews Of Modern Physics
Published:
Abstract

This article reviews static and dynamic interfacial effects in magnetism, focusing on interfacially-driven magnetic effects and phenomena associated with spin-orbit coupling and intrinsic symmetry breaking at interfaces. It provides a historical background and literature survey, but focuses on recent progress, identifying the most exciting new scientific results and pointing to promising future research directions. It starts with an introduction and overview of how basic magnetic properties are affected by interfaces, then turns to a discussion of charge and spin transport through and near interfaces and how these can be used to control the properties of the magnetic layer. Important concepts include spin accumulation, spin currents, spin transfer torque, and spin pumping. An overview is provided to the current state of knowledge and existing review literature on interfacial effects such as exchange bias, exchange spring magnets, spin Hall effect, oxide heterostructures, and topological insulators. The article highlights recent discoveries of interface-induced magnetism and non-collinear spin textures, non-linear dynamics including spin torque transfer and magnetization reversal induced by interfaces, and interfacial effects in ultrafast magnetization processes.

Authors
Frances Hellman, Axel Hoffmann, Yaroslav Tserkovnyak, Geoffrey S Beach, Eric Fullerton, Chris Leighton, Allan Macdonald, Daniel Ralph, Dario Arena, Hermann Dürr, Peter Fischer, Julie Grollier, Joseph Heremans, Tomas Jungwirth, Alexey Kimel, Bert Koopmans, Ilya Krivorotov, Steven May, Amanda Petford Long, James Rondinelli, Nitin Samarth, Ivan Schuller, Andrei Slavin, Mark Stiles, Oleg Tchernyshyov, André Thiaville, Barry Zink