Electrical time-domain observation of magnetization switching induced by spin transfer in magnetic nanostructures (invited)

We have measured the distribution of switching times in spin-transfer switching induced by fast current pulses in two pillar-shaped systems: (i) spin valves and (ii) MgO-based magnetic tunnel junctions. (i) Spin valves can sustain high currents, such that the application of pulsed currents of amplitude a few times that of the static switching threshold is possible. This makes subnanosecond switching within reach. In that limit, the pulse durations leading to switching follow a multiply stepped distribution at 300K and a regular distribution at 40K. At 300K, this reflects the precessional nature of the switching, which proceeds through a small number of precession cycles. The switching time distribution can be modeled from the thermal variance of the initial magnetization orientations. At 40K, nonuniform magnetization switching occurs. (ii) In MgO-based tunnel junctions, we could follow individual time-resolved switching events with a 13GHz bandwidth. The switching proceeds through a nanosecond-scale rando...

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