DocumentCode :
843316
Title :
Influence of stress and texture on soft magnetic properties of thin films
Author :
Zou, Pei ; Yu, Winnie ; Bain, James A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Volume :
38
Issue :
5
fYear :
2002
fDate :
9/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
3501
Lastpage :
3520
Abstract :
This paper presents the relationship among stress, crystallographic texture, and soft magnetic properties of thin films. The magnetic properties considered are those affected by the formation of stripe domains and by the formation of magnetization ripple. In practice, one of these two undesirable domain structures is almost always the impediment to improving the soft magnetic properties. The theoretical analysis accounts for the contribution from stress through magnetostrictive anisotropy, and calculates the resulting total, stress-dependent anisotropy of the film. This anisotropy is then analyzed to yield the effective perpendicular and local in-plane anisotropy constants. These constants allow the calculation of the stripe domain onset thickness through Murayama´s stripe domain theory, and the ripple coercivity through Hoffmann´s ripple theory. The influence of stress and texture on the stripe domain onset thickness and ripple coercivity is theoretically calculated and experimentally verified for the examples of sputtered CoFe and FeAlN films, two of the most promising and widely studied materials for high-density recording head poles. The results indicate that the interactions between stress and soft magnetic properties depend on the details of composition, growth texture, growth morphology (whether the film is grown in columnar fashion or as equiaxial crystallites), grain size, and thickness of the film under consideration. On the basis of these results, the paper offers a systematic approach to choosing the appropriate composition, texture, and thickness so that low stresses simultaneously promote magnetic states in which stripe domains are suppressed and coercivities are low. The calculations presented here can be easily extended to other aspects of soft magnetic properties addressed by the ripple theory, such as initial permeability
Keywords :
aluminium alloys; cobalt alloys; coercive force; crystallites; ferromagnetic materials; grain size; internal stresses; iron alloys; magnetic anisotropy; magnetic domains; magnetic permeability; magnetic thin films; magnetisation; magnetostriction; perpendicular magnetic anisotropy; soft magnetic materials; sputtered coatings; texture; CoFe; FeAlN; FeAlN films; Hoffmann ripple theory; Murayama stripe domain theory; coercivities; composition; crystallographic texture; domain structures; equiaxial crystallites; grain size; growth morphology; growth texture; initial permeability; local in-plane anisotropy constants; magnetic properties; magnetization ripple; magnetostrictive anisotropy; perpendicular anisotropy constants; recording head poles; ripple coercivity; soft magnetic properties; sputtered CoFe; stress; stripe domain onset thickness; stripe domains; texture; thin film; total stress-dependent anisotropy; Anisotropic magnetoresistance; Coercive force; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic anisotropy; Magnetic domains; Magnetic films; Magnetic properties; Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy; Soft magnetic materials; Stress;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9464
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.2002.802705
Filename :
1041970
Link To Document :
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