IBM Research Report. Research Division Almaden - Austin - Beijing - Cambridge - Haifa - India - T. J. Watson - Tokyo - Zurich

Similar documents
Network Analyzer Measurements of Spin Transfer Torques in Magnetic Tunnel. Junctions

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.mtrl-sci] 23 Jul 2009

[emu/cm 3 ] M s. of a 190-nm wide Pt(5 nm)/py(5 nm) nanowire measured as a function of magnetic field

Spin-transfer torque in nanoscale magnetic devices

S1. Current-induced switching in the magnetic tunnel junction.

Experimental setup to perform ferromagnetic resonance studies at the Modern Physics Laboratory

Broadband voltage rectifier induced by linear bias dependence in CoFeB/MgO magnetic tunnel junctions

Long-distance propagation of short-wavelength spin waves. Liu et al.

Magnetic tunnel junction sensors with conetic alloy. Lei, ZQ; Li, GJ; Egelhoff Jr, WF; Lai, PT; Pong, PWT

UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Chirp spectroscopy applied to the characterization of Ferromagnetic Resonance in Magnetic Tunnel Junctions

ANTENNA DEVELOPMENT FOR MULTIFUNCTIONAL ARMOR APPLICATIONS USING EMBEDDED SPIN-TORQUE NANO-OSCILLATOR (STNO) AS A MICROWAVE DETECTOR

Progress toward a thousandfold reduction in 1/ f noise in magnetic sensors using an ac microelectromechanical system flux concentrator invited

Microwave assisted magnetization reversal in single domain nanoelements 1

Magnetic characterization of CoFe-based glass covered amorphous wires at high frequency. G. Ababei 1,2, H. Chiriac 1

Spin-torque devices for Information-CommunicationTechnology

Supplementary Figure 1 High-resolution transmission electron micrograph of the

Microwave Absorption Properties of Cobalt Nanowires Fabricated by Pulse Electrodeposition

Giant spin-torque diode sensitivity at low input power in the absence of bias magnetic field

Magnetic Spin Devices: 7 Years From Lab To Product. Jim Daughton, NVE Corporation. Symposium X, MRS 2004 Fall Meeting

Tunneling Magnetoresistance Devices with MgO barrier and CoFeB electrodes for Magnetic. Field

Permeability Measurements of Very Thin Magnetic Film Using a Flexible Microstrip-Line-Type Probe

Broadband Ferromagnetic Resonance Setup

arxiv: v2 [physics.app-ph] 5 Dec 2017

A novel sensing algorithm for Spin-Transfer-Torque magnetic RAM (STT-MRAM) by utilizing dynamic reference

MgO MTJ biosensors for immunomagnetic lateralflow

AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF

Gigahertz Ambipolar Frequency Multiplier Based on Cvd Graphene

Real-Time Response and Phase-Sensitive Detection to Demonstrate the Validity of ESR-STM Results

Basic Principles, Challenges and Opportunities of STT-MRAM for Embedded Memory Applications

Design and construction of an experimental setup to study ferromagnetic resonance

UNCLASSIFIED: Dist A. Approved for public release

Compact size 3D magnetometer based on magnetoresistive sensors

Mohammad Kazemi, Student Member, IEEE, Engin Ipek, Member, IEEE, andebyg.friedman,fellow, IEEE

THE MEMS FLUX CONCENTRATOR: POTENTIAL LOW-COST, HIGHSENSITIVITY MAGNETOMETER

Broadband Ferromagnetic Resonance of Magnetic Insulator Thin Films and Bilayers: Effect of Overlayer on Spin Dynamics

MAGNETORESISTIVE random access memory

Radio-frequency scanning tunneling microscopy

US A1 (19) United States (12) Patent Application Publication (10) Pub. N0.: US 2013/ A1 Zhou et a]. (43) Pub. Date: Aug.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Spintronic nano-scale harvester of broadband microwave energy

FMR and standing spin waves in multifferroics

An 8-bit Analog-to-Digital Converter based on the Voltage-Dependent Switching Probability of a Magnetic Tunnel Junction

HDD Technology Trends

Status and Prospect for MRAM Technology

Spectrally Selective Photocapacitance Modulation in Plasmonic Nanochannels for Infrared Imaging

SPIN TRANSFER TORQUE INDUCED OSCILLATION AND SWITCHING IN MAGNETIC TUNNEL JUNCTION

Novel Buffered Magnetic Logic Gate Grid. T. Windbacher, A. Makarov, V. Sverdlov, and S. Selberherr

Nd:YSO resonator array Transmission spectrum (a. u.) Supplementary Figure 1. An array of nano-beam resonators fabricated in Nd:YSO.

Slot Antennas For Dual And Wideband Operation In Wireless Communication Systems

Performance of a Resistance-To-Voltage Read Circuit for Sensing Magnetic Tunnel Junctions

Investigation of Detection of Microwave Radiation in Ferromagnetic YIG

Application Note 5525

Fabrication and magnetoelectric properties of magnetic tunnel junctions with high magnetoresistance and low resistance

arxiv:physics/ v1 [physics.optics] 28 Sep 2005

Inductively Coupled Circuits with Spin Wave Bus for Information Processing. Device Research Laboratory, Electrical Engineering Department,

Characterization of guided resonances in photonic crystal slabs using terahertz time-domain spectroscopy

Furthermore, STJ-3D has a build-in thermistor, allowing the measurement of both temperature and magnetic field to be measured simultaneously.

Magneto-dielectric Substrate Influence on the Efficiency of a Reconfigurable Patch Antenna

STJ-100 TMR Magnetic Microsensor Dual In-line Package

HAL , 508, 509, HAL Hall Effect Sensor Family

Homework Assignment 12

Shape Biased Low Power Spin Dependent Tunneling Magnetic Field Sensors

CIRCULARLY POLARIZED SLOTTED APERTURE ANTENNA WITH COPLANAR WAVEGUIDE FED FOR BROADBAND APPLICATIONS

Supplementary information for Stretchable photonic crystal cavity with

PART MAX2605EUT-T MAX2606EUT-T MAX2607EUT-T MAX2608EUT-T MAX2609EUT-T TOP VIEW IND GND. Maxim Integrated Products 1

Understanding the Magnetic Resonance Spectrum of Nitrogen Vacancy Centers in an Ensemble of Randomly-Oriented Nanodiamonds, Supporting Information

Investigation of the Double-Y Balun for Feeding Pulsed Antennas

380 IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN OF INTEGRATED CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS, VOL. 35, NO. 3, MARCH 2016

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Design of Light Weight Microstrip Patch Antenna on Dielectric and Magnetodielectric Substrate for Broadband Applications in X-Band

SpinSwitch month 24 Krakow MICROWAVE APPLICATIONS OF STNOs

PHYS 3152 Methods of Experimental Physics I E2. Diodes and Transistors 1

AC Measurement of Magnetic Susceptibility

Low Flicker Noise Current-Folded Mixer

Spin-orbit torque-driven magnetization switching and thermal effects studied in Ta\CoFeB\MgO nanowires

2. BAND-PASS NOISE MEASUREMENTS

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

VITESSE SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION. Bandwidth (MHz) VSC

Accurate Models for Spiral Resonators

Interaction of magnetic-dipolar modes with microwave-cavity. electromagnetic fields

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

ECE4902 C Lab 7

A scanning tunneling microscopy based potentiometry technique and its application to the local sensing of the spin Hall effect

Design of CPW Fed Ultra wideband Fractal Antenna and Backscattering Reduction

Single-Supply, 42 V System Difference Amplifier AD8206

E84 Lab 3: Transistor

Single-Supply 42 V System Difference Amplifier AD8205

EE4902 C Lab 7

Up to 6 GHz Medium Power Silicon Bipolar Transistor. Technical Data AT Plastic Package

China; * Corresponding authors:

Novel Electrically Small Spherical Electric Dipole Antenna

Novel Metamaterials for Patch Antennas Applications

12.92 GHz to GHz MMIC VCO with Half Frequency Output HMC1169

techniques, and gold metalization in the fabrication of this device.

Spin torque and Magnetic order induced by supercurrent

12.17 GHz to GHz MMIC VCO with Half Frequency Output HMC1167

Non-ideal Behavior of Electronic Components at High Frequencies and Associated Measurement Problems

Transcription:

RC24655 (W0809-114) September 29, 2008 Physics IBM Research Report Field and Bias Dependence of High-frequency Magnetic Noise in MgO-based Magnetic Tunnel Junctions Y. Guan, D. W. Abraham, M. C. Gaidis, G. Hu, E. J. O'Sullivan, J. J. Nowak, P. L. Trouilloud, D. C. Worledge, J. Z. Sun IBM Research Division Thomas J. Watson Research Center P.O. Box 218 Yorktown Heights, NY 10598 Research Division Almaden - Austin - Beijing - Cambridge - Haifa - India - T. J. Watson - Tokyo - Zurich LIMITED DISTRIBUTION NOTICE: This report has been submitted for publication outside of IBM and will probably be copyrighted if accepted for publication. It has been issued as a Research Report for early dissemination of its contents. In view of the transfer of copyright to the outside publisher, its distribution outside of IBM prior to publication should be limited to peer communications and specific requests. After outside publication, requests should be filled only by reprints or legally obtained copies of the article (e.g., payment of royalties). Copies may be requested from IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, P. O. Box 218, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598 USA (email: reports@us.ibm.com). Some reports are available on the internet at http://domino.watson.ibm.com/library/cyberdig.nsf/home.

Field and bias dependence of high-frequency magnetic noise in MgO-based magnetic tunnel junctions Y. Guan, D. W. Abraham, M. C. Gaidis, G. Hu, E. J. O Sullivan, J. J. Nowak, P. L. Trouilloud, D. C. Worledge, and J. Z. Sun IBM-MagIC MRAM Alliance, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, New York 10598 (Dated: September 9, 2008) Abstract We present room-temperature measurements of high-frequency magnetization fluctuation (magnoise) in MgO-based nanopillar magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) biased with a direct current (DC). In the frequency range of 1-13 GHz, double mag-noise peaks are observed for some MTJs while others only show a single mag-noise peak. The in-plane field dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency is consistent with the Kittel formula. For all MTJs measured, the bias-dependent shift of the mag-noise peak frequency has a pronounced asymmetry. In addition, we find nonmonotonic variations in peak linewidth as a function of the external in-plane magnetic field and of the DC bias current. These suggest the possible involvement of non-macrospin modes in spintorque-dependent thermal mag-noise generation. E-mail address: yguan@us.ibm.com. 1

INTRODUCTION Spin-momentum transfer[1, 2] between a spin-polarized direct current (DC) and a ferromagnetic layer provides a controlled manipulation of magnetic moment in nanoscale magnetic structures. For sensors, magnetization fluctuation noise (mag-noise) in a magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) has become a major concern[3, 4] as its dimension continues to shrink. High-frequency mag-noise in a DC-biased nanoscale MTJ reflects spin-transferinduced magnetization dynamics and is thus of growing interest[5 10]. High-frequency mag-noise spectrum is similar to that of a typical ferromagnetic resonance (FMR); however, the mechanisms governing the DC-biased mag-noise differ from those in FMR experiments excited by oscillatory currents. When DC biased below the critical current, the system is driven by thermal noise. The field and bias dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency and linewidth could be useful for the study of spin-torque dynamics in MTJs. Here, we present room-temperature mag-noise measurements between 1-13 GHz as a function of an external in-plane magnetic field and a DC bias current applied to the MgObased nanopillar MTJs. Double mag-noise peaks are observed for some MTJs while others only show a single mag-noise peak. For all MTJs measured, the in-plane field dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency is consistent with the Kittel formula. The bias-dependent shift of the mag-noise peak frequency is asymmetric for positive and negative bias. In addition, we find non-monotonic dependencies of the mag-noise peak linewidth on the external magnetic field and the bias current. EXPERIMENT The mag-noise measurement setup used here is similar to previous reports[4, 6]. The measurements are performed at room temperature on nanopillar MTJs with an external in-plane magnetic field (up to 4 koe) applied by an electromagnet. A Hall sensor is used to measure the actual field near the measured MTJ. A 50 Ω bias tee with a bandwidth of 80 khz-26 GHz (5541A Picosecond Pulse Labs) is used to apply a DC bias current to the MTJ, while outputting the mag-noise signals from the MTJ. The electrical contact is made using wire bonding, where the top (bottom) bonding pad of the MTJ is wire bonded to the center (ground) part of a 50 Ω coplanar waveguide (CPW) transmission line. The mag- 2

noise signals from the MTJ are directed to a 35 db low-noise amplifier with a bandwidth of 100 MHz-18 GHz (Miteq AFS-series), and then measured using a spectrum analyzer with a frequency range of 9 khz-26.5 GHz and an input impedance of 50 Ω (ESA E4407B Agilent Technologies). The resolution bandwidth of the spectrum analyzer is set to 5 MHz and each spectrum is obtained by averaging over 100 spectral scans. For all the mag-noise spectra shown here, the signals at zero bias are subtracted from those measured at nonzero bias. This removes the background Johnson noise as well as the amplifier noise. We have measured two different types of MgO-based nanopillar MTJs with the following stack composition (in Å): buffer-layer/ptmn(175)/synthetic-antiferromagnet-pinnedlayer/mgo(9.5)/fe(5)/co 60 Fe 20 B 20 (10)/Ru(100)/capping-layer, labeled A, and Ta(50)/ Cu(200)/Ta(30)/Cu(200)/PtMn(150)/Co 70 Fe 30 (25)/Ru(8.5)/Co 60 Fe 20 B 20 (30)/MgO(12.5)/ Co 60 Fe 20 B 20 (25)/Ta(50)/Ru(70), labeled B. An Anelva I-4500 RIE tool was used to fully pattern both the free and the pinned layers of A-type MTJs, while an ion mill was used to etch the free layers of B-type MTJs with the pinned layers left extended on the scale of tens of micrometers. For both types of MTJs, the top free magnetic layers were etched to elliptical cross-sections of different sizes with long axes parallel to the exchange bias of the bottom pinned layers. We have measured dozens of MTJs from each type. The main results presented here are from a 97 166 nm 2 A-type MTJ with the resistance-area (RA) product of 10 Ω µm 2 and the tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) ratio of 80%, labeled device A, and a 50 150 nm 2 B-type MTJ with RA 20 Ω µm 2 and TMR 160%, labeled device B. The external in-plane magnetic field (H) is always applied along the hard axis of the free layer, and the bias current (I) is defined positive when current flows from the top (free) layer to the bottom (pinned) layer. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Fig. 1(a) and (b) show the tunnel resistance (R) as a function of in-plane magnetic field (H) for devices A (for I = 5 µa) and B (for I = 1 µa), respectively. For device A, a hysteretic behavior exists in the low-field region between -53 Oe and 27 Oe. For device B, the behavior is similar to that reported in Ref. [11]. The difference is due to a small but uncontrolled 3

offset field which would not affect mag-noise under our measurement conditions. Fig. 1(c) shows a mag-noise spectrum of device A for H = 1196 Oe and I = -600 µa, where double peaks are clearly observed. Fig. 1(d) shows a mag-noise spectrum of device B for H = 916 Oe and I = -100 µa, where only a single peak is observed. For all the measured values of H and I, double mag-noise peaks corresponding to two distinct modes are always observed and are well defined for device A, while only a single mag-noise peak is always observed for device B. The single-double peak difference between these two devices is possibly due to their different patterned structures. By fitting those mag-noise spectra with a single or double Lorentzian function, both the peak frequency (f) and the linewidth ( f) are obtained. The in-plane field dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency for devices A (for I = -600 µa) and B (for I = -100 µa) are presented in Fig. 2(a) and (b), respectively. For both devices, f shifts to higher frequencies with increasing H. The data are well fitted using the Kittel formula for in-plane hard-axis field, similar to[12] f = γ (H eff H k )(H eff + 4πM eff ), (1) 2π where γ is the gyromagnetic ratio, H k is the in-plane uniaxial anisotropy field, M eff is the effective magnetization, and H eff = H +H coupling +Dk 2 /gµ B. H coupling denotes the effective coupling field between the free layer and the pinned layer, which is a few tens of Oe and can be neglected. D is the exchange stiffness, g is the Landé factor, k is the spin-wave wave vector, and µ B is the Bohr magneton. In fitting the data, we consider only k = 0 modes with H k and 4πM eff treated as free parameters. For device A, the best fit gives a 4πM eff value of 1.4±0.1 koe for the first mag-noise peak (low frequency) and 3.0±0.2 koe for the second mag-noise peak (high frequency), which indicates that the two mag-noise peaks may correspond to two different modes in the coupled free layer-pinned layer system. For device B, the best fit gives 4πM eff = 5.1±0.1 koe. For both devices, the fitted effective magnetization values are smaller than the corresponding bulk values, similar to previous reports[3, 5], which may imply the presence of some out-of-plane magnetic anisotropy field for the free layer. Fig. 2(c) plots the current-bias dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency for device A for H = 1196 Oe. For the first mag-noise peak (bottom), f increases with increasing negative bias and exhibits smaller change at positive bias. For the second mag-noise peak 4

(top), f decreases with increasing positive bias and exhibits smaller change at negative bias. Similar trends in peak frequency shift are observed for device A for all the other measured values of H. A bias-dependent asymmetry in the mag-noise peak frequency shift also exists for device B. As shown in Fig. 2(d) for device B for H = 916 Oe, f increases by 80 MHz with the negative bias of -130 µa and decreases by 35 MHz with the positive bias of 130 µa. This asymmetry, similar to previous reports[11, 13], does not agree with single-domain calculations based on an in-plane or a perpendicular spin torque[14]. A macrospin Landau- Lifshitz-Gilbert (LLG) model with the in-plane spin torque predicts a linear bias-dependent shift in f that is about two orders smaller than the experimental values. The predicted peak frequency shift due to the perpendicular spin torque is of the same order of magnitude as the experimental values; however, it is parabolic and symmetric against bias. Fig. 3(a) plots the current-field phase diagram for the peak linewidth of the first magnoise peak of device A, and Fig. 3(b) plots the current-field phase diagram for the mag-noise peak linewidth of device B. As shown in both phase diagrams, f depends both on external in-plane magnetic field and on bias current. First, f alternatively increases and decreases with H, similar to a recent report[9]. Several stripes in H, corresponding to local maxima or minima of f, are observed in both phase diagrams. Secondly, f is not a simple monotonic function of I. Opposite shifts in f with I are sometimes observed for different H. Similar trends in the field and current dependencies of the mag-noise peak linewidth have been found for all MTJs measured. These features in the current-field phase diagrams for f are not explained by macrospin models, where monotonic dependencies of f on both H and I are expected. CONCLUSION High-frequency magnetic noise measurements have been performed on two different types of MgO-based nanopillar MTJs biased with a direct current. For all MTJs measured, the inplane field dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency is in good agreement with the Kittel formula. A bias-dependent asymmetry in the mag-noise peak frequency shift is observed. In addition, the mag-noise peak linewidth shows a non-monotonic dependence on external in-plane magnetic field and on bias current. The results suggest the possible involvement of 5

non-macrospin modes even in sub-critically DC-biased MTJs. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors wish to thank Neil Smith and Jack C. Sankey for helpful discussions. This work is supported under an MRAM development alliance program between IBM and MagIC. [1] L. Berger, Phys. Rev. B 54, 9353 (1996). [2] J. C. Slonczewski, J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 159, L1 (1996). [3] V. Synogatch, N. Smith, and J. R. Childress, J. Appl. Phys. 93, 8570 (2003). [4] G. C. Han et al., J. Appl. Phys. 100, 063912 (2006). [5] S. Petit et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 077203 (2007). [6] A. V. Nazarov et al., J. Appl. Phys. 103, 07A503 (2008). [7] J.-V. Kim, V. Tiberkevich, and A. N. Slavin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 017207 (2008). [8] J.-V. Kim et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 167201 (2008). [9] D. Houssameddine et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 93, 022505 (2008). [10] A. M. Deac et al., Nature Phys., doi:10.1038/nphys1036 (2008). [11] J. C. Sankey et al., Nature Phys. 4, 67 (2008). [12] C. Kittel, Introduction to Solid State Physics (Wiley, New York, 2005). [13] H. Kubota et al., Nature Phys. 4, 37 (2008). [14] I. Theodonis et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 237205 (2006). Figures 6

1.2 8 (a) I = 5 µa (b) I = 1 µa 1.0 6 R (kω) 0.8 R (kω) 4 0.6-4 -2 0 2 4 2-4 -2 0 2 4 15 (c) H = 1196 Oe 15 (d) H = 916 Oe 10 I = -600 µa 10 I = -100 µa P (nw) 5 P (nw) 5 0 0 4 8 12 f (GHz) 0 0 4 8 12 f (GHz) FIG. 1: (Color online) (a) In-plane hard-axis field dependence of the tunnel resistance of device A for I = 5 µa; (b) In-plane hard-axis field dependence of the tunnel resistance of device B for I = 1 µa; (c) Mag-noise spectrum of device A for H = 1196 Oe and I = -600 µa, including a fit to a double Lorentzian function. (d) Mag-noise spectrum of device B for H = 916 Oe and I = -100 µa, including a fit to a single Lorentzian function. 7

10 (a) I = -600 µa (b) I = -100 µa 8 8 f (GHz) 6 f (GHz) 6 4-2 -1 0 1 2 4-2 -1 0 1 2 f (GHz) f (GHz) 7.2 7.0 6.8 5.8 5.6 5.4 (c) H = 1196 Oe 2 nd peak -500 0 500 1 st peak I (µa) -500 0 500 I (µa) f (GHz) 5.64 5.58 5.52 5.46 (d) H = 916 Oe -150-75 0 75 150 I (µa) FIG. 2: (Color online) (a) In-plane hard-axis field dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency for device A for I = -600 µa, including fits to Eq. (1); (b) In-plane hard-axis field dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency for device B for I = -100 µa, including fits to Eq. (1); (c) Currentbias dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency for device A for H = 1196 Oe; (d) Current-bias dependence of the mag-noise peak frequency for device B for H = 916 Oe. 8

(a) (b) 1.4 f (MHz) 450 1.4 f (MHz) 320 1.2 1.2 1.0 650 1.0 410-500 0 500 I (µa) -100-50 0 50 100 I (µa) FIG. 3: (Color online) (a) Current-field phase diagram for the peak linewidth of the first mag-noise peak of device A; (b) Current-field phase diagram for the mag-noise peak linewidth of device B. 9