Title :
Measurement and analysis of noise sources in giant magnetoresistive sensors up to 6 GHz
Author :
Jury, Jason C. ; Klaassen, Klaas B. ; Van Peppen, Jack C L ; Wang, Shan X.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Stanford Univ., CA, USA
fDate :
9/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Describes the electrical and magnetic noise sources prevalent in giant magnetoresistive (GMR) sensors. At lower frequencies (<1 MHz), 1/f noise is generally dominant. Electrical (Nyquist-Johnson) and magnetic thermal fluctuation noise are dominant above 1 MHz. Because the GMR sensor resistance is current dependent (i.e., nonlinear), its electrical noise is higher than would be expected from its dc resistance. Noise measurements on saturated GMR sensors indicate that the ac small-signal resistance is a better indicator of electrical noise. A thermal-electric model is presented for the GMR sensor that is useful for interpreting the ac resistance and electrical noise. Along with midfrequency (1-100 MHz) magnetic thermal noise data, noise spectra (up to 6 GHz) show a magnetic noise resonance around 4-5 GHz. A simple single-domain, Landau-Lifshitz model to explain the resonance behavior is given. In some cases, two significant resonance peaks appear; we believe this stems from nonuniform free-layer magnetization caused by insufficient hard bias
Keywords :
1/f noise; giant magnetoresistance; magnetic recording noise; magnetic sensors; magnetisation; magnetoresistive devices; thermal noise; 1 MHz to 6 GHz; 1/f noise; Nyquist-Johnson noise; ac small-signal resistance; electrical noise sources; giant magnetoresistive sensors; magnetic noise resonance; magnetic noise sources; magnetic thermal fluctuation noise; nonuniform free-layer magnetization; resonance peaks; single-domain Landau-Lifshitz model; thermal-electric model; Electric resistance; Electrical resistance measurement; Giant magnetoresistance; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic noise; Magnetic resonance; Magnetic sensors; Noise measurement; Saturation magnetization; Thermal resistance;
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.2002.802706