Charles Explorer logo
🇬🇧

Optical spectroscopy of sputtered nanometer-thick yttrium iron garnet films

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2015

Abstract

Nanometer (nm)-thick yttrium iron garnet (Y3Fe5O12, YIG) films present interest for spintronics. This work employs spectral ellipsometry and magneto-optic Kerr effect (MOKE) spectra to characterize nm-thick YIG films grown on single-crystal Gd3Ga5O12 substrates by magnetron sputtering.

The thickness (t) of the films ranges between 10 nm and 40 nm. Independent on t, the polar MOKE hysteresis loops saturate in the field of about 1.8 kOe, consistent with the saturation magnetization in bulk YIG (4 pi M-s approximate to 1.75 kG).

The MOKE spectrum measured at photon energies between 1.3 eV and 4.5 eV on the 38-nm-thick film agrees with that measured on single-crystal YIG bulk materials. The MOKE spectrum of the 12-nm-thick film still preserves the structure of the bulk YIG but its amplitude at lower photon energies is modified due to the fact that the radiation penetration depth exceeds 20 nm.

The t dependence of the MOKE amplitude is consistent with MOKE calculations. The results indicate that the films are stoichiometric, strain free, without Fe2+, and preserve bulk YIG properties down to t approximate to 10 nm. (c) 2015 AIP Publishing LLC.