Parallel pumping of magnons in inhomogeneous spin textures probed through NV spin relaxometry

Author:

Trimble J.1ORCID,Gould B.12,Heremans F. J.34ORCID,Zhang S. S.-L.1ORCID,Awschalom D. D.34ORCID,Berezovsky J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, Case Western Reserve University 1 , Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA

2. Department of Physics, The Pennsylvania State University 2 , University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA

3. Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago 3 , Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA

4. Center for Molecular Engineering and Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory 4 , Lemont, Illinois 60439, USA

Abstract

We combine micromagnetic simulations and nitrogen-vacancy (NV) defect center spin relaxometry measurements to study magnon modes in inhomogeneous spin textures. A thin, micrometer-scale ferromagnetic disk is magnetized in a vortex state in which the magnetization curls around a central core. Micromagnetic simulations show that at zero applied field, the magnetization dynamics of the disk consist of a low frequency gyrotropic mode and higher frequency azimuthal magnon modes, all far detuned from the NV spin transition frequencies. An in-plane static magnetic field breaks the azimuthal symmetry of the vortex state, resulting in the magnon modes transforming in frequency and spatial profile as the field increases. Experimentally, we probe the dynamics of vortex magnetization as a function of applied in-plane static field and ac driving frequency by optically monitoring a nearby NV defect center spin. At certain values of the applied magnetic field, we observe enhanced spin relaxation when driving at twice the frequency of the NV ground state spin transition in optically detected magnetic resonance measurements. We attribute this effect to parallel pumping of a magnon mode in the disk producing magnons at half the excitation frequency. Micromagnetic simulations support this finding, showing spatial and spectral overlap of a confined magnon mode and an NV spin transition, with sufficient interaction strength to explain the observed signal.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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