Abstract
Magnetic memory combining plasmonics and magnetism is poised to dramatically increase the bit density and energy efficiency of light-assisted ultrafast magnetic storage, thanks to nanoplasmon-driven enhancement and confinement of light. Here we devise a new path for that, simultaneously enabling light-driven bit downscaling, reduction of the required energy for magnetic memory writing, and a subtle control over the degree of demagnetization in a magnetophotonic surface crystal. It features a regular array of truncated-nanocone-shaped Au-TbCo antennas showing both localized plasmon and surface lattice resonance modes. The ultrafast magnetization dynamics of the nanoantennas show a 3-fold resonant enhancement of the demagnetization efficiency. The degree of demagnetization is further tuned by activating surface lattice modes. This reveals a platform where ultrafast demagnetization is localized at the nanoscale and its extent can be controlled at will, rendering it multistate and potentially opening up so-far-unforeseen nanomagnetic neuromorphic-like systems operating at femtosecond time scales controlled by light.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Mishra, K., Rowan-Robinson, R. M., Ciuciulkaite, A., Davies, C. S., Dmitriev, A., Kapaklis, V., … Kirilyuk, A. (2022). Ultrafast Demagnetization Control in Magnetophotonic Surface Crystals. Nano Letters, 22(23), 9773–9780. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00769
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.