J. Mater. Sci. Technol. ›› 2022, Vol. 120: 186-195.DOI: 10.1016/j.jmst.2021.12.053

• Research Article • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Performance of switch between exchange bias and coercivity: Influences of antiferromagnetic anisotropy and exchange coupling

Ruijun Lia,b, Fan Zhangc, Yong Hua,b,*()   

  1. aDepartment of Physics, College of Sciences, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, China
    bState Key Laboratory of Rolling and Automation, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, China
    cDepartment of Logistics Management, Liaoning Provincial College of Communications, Shenyang 110122, China
  • Received:2021-08-21 Revised:2021-12-04 Accepted:2021-12-15 Published:2022-09-01 Online:2022-03-12
  • Contact: Yong Hu
  • About author:* Department of Physics, College of Sciences, Northeast- ern University, Shenyang 110819, China. E-mail address: huyong@mail.neu.edu.cn (Y. Hu).

Abstract:

The study on temperature dependence of exchange bias field and coercivity is crucial to solving the writing/reading dilemma in magnetic recording. Motivated by recent experimental findings, a complete switch between exchange bias field and coercivity with temperature is proposed, and the performance, characterized by average switching temperature (TS) and switching temperature width (ΔTW), controlled by antiferromagnetic anisotropy (KAF) and exchange coupling (JAF) constants is studied based on a Monte-Carlo simulation. The results show that a linear relationship between TS and KAF is established when KAF is above a critical value, while TS is weakly influenced by JAF. On the contrary, ΔTW is insensitive to KAF, while strongly depends on JAF. Besides overcoming thermal energy, the increase of KAF for a small JAF guarantees the completely frozen states in the antiferromagnetic layers during magnetizing at higher temperature, below which the exchange bias field exists with a negligible coercivity. Otherwise, for a large JAF, the uncompensated antiferromagnetic magnetization behavior during the ferromagnetic magnetization reversal becomes complicated, and the switching process in the low temperature range depends on the irreversibility of uncompensated antiferromagnetic magnetization reversal during magnetizing, while in the high temperature range mainly influenced by the field-cooling process, resulting in a large ΔTW. This work provides an opportunity to control/optimize the performance of the temperature-induced switch between unidirectional and uniaxial symmetries through precisely tuning KAF and/or JAF to meet different application demands in the next generation information technology.

Key words: Magnetic recording, Ferromagnet/antiferromagnet multilayer, Exchange-bias/coercivity switch, Temperature dependenceAntiferromagnetic anisotropy, Antiferromagnetic exchange coupling, Monte-Carlo simulation