Designer 3D Magnetic Mesostructures

Lead Research Organisation: University of Southampton
Department Name: Faculty of Engineering & the Environment

Abstract

In a remarkable recent paper Xiao et al. at Argonne National Laboratories demonstrated that 'architecture-tuneable' Pb mesostructures (samples whose dimensions lie between microscopic 'atomic' scales and macroscopic 'bulk' scales at which the specific geometry no longer plays a role for physical properties) can be grown by electrodeposition from lead salt solutions onto graphite substrates. Simply varying the electrode potentials allows an extraordinary variety of different sample morphologies to be realised, ranging from regular polyhedra and nanowires to multipods and 'snowflakes'. These structures are truly three-dimensional (3D) superconducting mesocrystals with few bulk defects and perfectly smooth faceted faces, whose magnetic properties are dominated by their size and shape. The same deposition method should be readily extendable to many ferromagnetic metals and alloys. For the first time it is now possible to controllably fabricate regular faceted 3D mesoscrystals without the disorder and rough surfaces/edges characteristic of lithographically-patterned thin film structures. Crucially, the dimensions of these 3D mesostructures are comparable with the relevant characteristic lengthscales found in ferromagnetism and superconductivity (e.g. ferromagnetic domain size and/or domain wall width or superconducting coherence length and/or magnetic field penetration depth) in contrast to widely studied nanoscale particles/clusters and nanowires. Competition between different processes as a function of the size and shape of these 3D structures should lead to rich new physical phenomena with strong potential for exploitation. In collaboration with the Argonne group we have shown that surface/shape effects can completely dominate the magnetisation of these materials, opening up the possibility of 'designing' crystals with desirable, exploitable properties. We propose to considerably extend the scope of this work within a collaboration between well established groups in electrochemistry and nanoscale physics at the University of Bath and theoreticians in Southampton and Antwerp. We plan to grow and investigate both superconducting and ferromagnetic mesocrystals with a wide range of morphologies, as well as hybrid ferromagnetic-superconductor core-shell structures and continuous hybrid networks. The most promising materials produced will be systematically characterised using Hall nanomagnetometry and/or magnetoresistance measurements. Experimental results will be interpreted by comparison with tailor-made state-of-the-art 3D micromagnetic simulations and/or solutions of the 3D Ginzburg-Landau equation. Opportunities for exploitation of these novel magnetic materials will also be identified and explored.

Publications

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Albert M (2012) Domain wall motion in perpendicular anisotropy nanowires with edge roughness. in Journal of physics. Condensed matter : an Institute of Physics journal

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Fangohr H (2011) Joule heating in nanowires in Physical Review B

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Fischbacher T (2011) Micromagnetic simulations of magnetoelectric materials in Journal of Applied Physics

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Hans Fangohr (2009) Nmag Software (release 0.1-6481)

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Knittel A (2009) Compression of boundary element matrix in micromagnetic simulations in Journal of Applied Physics

 
Description This is part of a joint project with Physics and Chemistry in Bath, and other (unfunded) international partners. The research done was centred around 3d nanostructures with a superconducting core and a ferromagnetic shell. The interdisciplinary team grow the samples electrochemically, conduct measurements, and run simulations to enable interpretation of the measurements.



The fundamental research shows that it is possible to switch the superconducting core on and off by controlling the magnetic structure of the shell with an external field: this affects the ferromagnetic layer, which (through its stray field) enhances or suppresses the superconductivity in the core. Possible applications include higher current carrying superconducting wires (e.g. for magnetic resonance imaging and power cables) to novel low-power superconducting memory devices.



The modelling work has improved the Open Source Nmag simulation tool (http://nmag.soton.ac.uk). A particular study looked at the effect of rounded geometries for ferromagnetic nano structures -- such realistic shapes are important for device design but often ignored in simulations studies.
Exploitation Route Long term fundamental work at this stage. Can lead to novel low power superconducting memory devices, high current carrying superconductors that are cheaper to run (with applications of such superconducting wires already today in medical Magnetic Resonance Imaging devices, for example), and a number of devices and systems spanning these two length scales. The findings provide first insights into the potential of hybrid magnetic-superconducting nano structures. The modelling work has supported and improved the Nmag open source simulation tool (http://nmag.soton.ac.uk), and thus benefitted a wide variety of people in academia and industry who all make used of the tool.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Manufacturing/ including Industrial Biotechology

URL http://nmag.soton.ac.uk
 
Description The grant has helped to develop a data compression methodology that subsequently enabled the team and other users of the Nmag software to carry out larger simulations.
First Year Of Impact 2009
Sector Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Electronics,Other
 
Description DYNAMAG - ADVANCED COMPUTATIONAL STUDIES OF DYNAMIC PHENOMENA IN MAGNETIC NANO-MATERIALS
Amount £300,000 (GBP)
Funding ID CF-FP233552 
Organisation European Commission 
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start 06/2009 
End 05/2012
 
Description DYNAMAG - ADVANCED COMPUTATIONAL STUDIES OF DYNAMIC PHENOMENA IN MAGNETIC NANO-MATERIALS
Amount £300,000 (GBP)
Funding ID CF-FP233552 
Organisation European Commission 
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start 06/2009 
End 05/2012
 
Description European Union Framework 7
Amount £300,000 (GBP)
Funding ID DYNAMAG 
Organisation European Commission 
Department Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start  
 
Description European Union Framework 7
Amount £300,000 (GBP)
Funding ID DYNAMAG 
Organisation European Commission 
Department Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)
Sector Public
Country European Union (EU)
Start