Abstract
Understanding of ultrafast spin dynamics is crucial for future spintronic applications. In particular, the role of non-thermal electrons needs further investigation in order to gain a fundamental understanding of photoinduced demagnetization and remagnetization on a femtosecond time scale. We experimentally demonstrate that non-thermal electrons existing in the very early phase of the photoinduced demagnetization process play a key role in governing the overall ultrafast spin dynamics behavior. We simultaneously measured the time-resolved reflectivity (TR-R) and the magneto-optical Kerr effect (TR-MOKE) for a Co/Pt multilayer film. By using an extended three-temperature model (E3TM), the quantitative analysis, including non-thermal electron energy transfer into the subsystem (thermal electron, lattice, and spin), reveals that energy flow from non-thermal electrons plays a decisive role in determining the type I and II photoinduced spin dynamics behavior. Our finding proposes a new mechanism for understanding ultrafast remagnetization dynamics.
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CITATION STYLE
Shim, J. H., Syed, A. A., Kim, J. I., Piao, H. G., Lee, S. H., Park, S. Y., … Kim, D. H. (2020). Role of non-thermal electrons in ultrafast spin dynamics of ferromagnetic multilayer. Scientific Reports, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-63452-3
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