We study, experimentally and by micromagnetic simulations, the propagation of spin waves in 100-nm thick YIG waveguides, where the width linearly decreases from 2 to 0.5 μm over a transition region with varying lengths between 2.5 and 10 μm. We show that this geometry results in a downconversion of the wavelength, enabling efficient generation of waves with wavelengths down to 350 nm. We also find that this geometry leads to a modification in the group velocity, allowing for almost-dispersionless propagation of spin-wave pulses. Moreover, we demonstrate that the influence of energy concentration outweighs that of damping in these YIG waveguides, resulting in an overall increase in the spin-wave intensity during propagation in the transition region. These findings can be utilized to improve the efficiency and functionality of magnonic devices that use spin waves as an information carrier.
CITATION STYLE
Lake, S. R., Divinskiy, B., Schmidt, G., Demokritov, S. O., & Demidov, V. E. (2021). Efficient geometrical control of spin waves in microscopic YIG waveguides. Applied Physics Letters, 119(18). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0071757
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