Reprogrammable magnonic crystals formed by interacting ferromagnetic nanowires

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Abstract

Spin-wave (SW) modes are addressed which are confined in thin individual Ni80Fe20 nanowires with widths ranging from 220 to 360 nm. In periodic arrays with an edge-to-edge separation of down to 100 nm, confined modes of neighboring nanowires are found to couple coherently and form allowed minibands and forbidden frequency gaps. This gives rise to a one-dimensional magnonic crystal. We present all-electrical SW spectroscopy data and micromagnetic simulations. We find that the nanowire arrays allow us to reprogram the relevant magnonic band structure via the magnetic history. A forbidden frequency gap of up to about 1 GHz is controlled by an in-plane magnetic field being as small as a few mT. © 2011 IUPAC.

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Topp, J., Duerr, G., Thurner, K., & Grundler, D. (2011). Reprogrammable magnonic crystals formed by interacting ferromagnetic nanowires. Pure and Applied Chemistry, 83(11), 1989–2001. https://doi.org/10.1351/PAC-CON-11-03-06

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