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Magnetization nutation induced by surface effects in nanomagnets

Published 19 Jul 2018 in cond-mat.mes-hall | (1807.07392v1)

Abstract: We investigate the magnetization dynamics of ferromagnetic nanoparticles in the atomistic approach taking account of surface anisotropy and the spin misalignment it causes. We demonstrate that such inhomogeneous spin configurations induce nutation in the dynamics of the particle's magnetization. More precisely, in addition to the ordinary precessional motion with frequency $f_{p}\sim10\,{\rm GHz}$, we find that the dynamics of the net magnetic moment exhibits two more resonance peaks with frequencies $f_{c}$ and $f_{n}$ which are higher than the frequency $f_{p} : f_{c}=4\times f_{p}\sim40\,{\rm GHz}$ is related with the oscillations of the particle's magnetic moment between the minima of the effective potential induced by weak surface anisotropy. On the other hand, the much higher frequency $f_{n}\sim1\,{\rm THz}$ is attributed to the magnetization fluctuations at the atomic level driven by exchange interaction. We have compared our results on nutation induced by surface effects with those rendered by the macroscopic approach based on the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation augmented by an inertial term (proportional to the second-order time derivative of the macroscopic moment) with a phenomenological coefficient. The good agreement between the two models have allowed us to estimate the latter coefficient in terms of the atomistic parameters such as the surface anisotropy constant. We have thus proposed a new origin for the magnetization nutations as being induced by surface effects and have interpreted the corresponding resonance peaks and their frequencies.

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