1st Edition

Handbook of Nanomagnetism Applications and Tools

Edited By Rosa A. Lukaszew Copyright 2016
    304 Pages 21 Color & 72 B/W Illustrations
    by Jenny Stanford Publishing

    This unique handbook compiles and details cutting-edge research in nanomagnetism and its applications in spintronics, magnetoplasmonics, and nonlinear magneto-optics. Fundamental aspects of magnetism relevant to nanodevices and new spin-transfer torque random-access memory (STT-RAM), current-induced domain wall motion memory, and spin torque oscillators, as well as highly anisotropic materials and topics on magnetization damping are developed in detail in the book. New paradigms such as molecule-based magnets (MBMs), which are a promisingly adaptive class of solids poised to open new frontiers of exploration, are also covered.

    The relationship between magnetism and nonlinear optics and the new field of magnetoplasmonics is also developed in detail. The book also includes a thorough chapter on spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy (SP-STM), which enables studying magnetic phenomena on surfaces with real-space imaging and spectroscopy techniques down to the atomic level. All these topics are developed by an interdisciplinary team of leading experts in their pertinent fields. The book will certainly appeal to anyone involved in nanomagnetism and its application in spintronic nanodevices and nonlinear magneto-optics.

    Introduction. Spintronics and spintronic applications. L10 alloy thin films and nanostructures. Relaxation in magnetic materials for spintronics. Nonlinear dynamic properties of two-dimensional arrays of magnetic nanodots. Dynamics of magnetic nanoparticles and nano-devices. Magneto-plasmonic nanostructures. Nonlinear optics in magnetic nanostructures. Understanding magnetic exchange in molecule-based magnets from an electronic structure point of view. Spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy.

    Biography

    Rosa Alejandra Lukaszew has been working in experimental condensed matter physics since the mid-nineties. Her field of research comprises thin films and nanostructures, and aspects of her work have been devoted to magnetic thin films and nanostructures spanning magnetic anisotropy, multilayer engineering, spin-dependent tunneling, and magnetoplasmonics. She has secured significant funding from several US national agencies (DOE, DARPA, DTRA, and NSF) for her past and ongoing research projects. She has collaborated and continues to collaborate with leading experts in the field, many of whom are contributors to this book. She has also been an active member of the Magnetic Interfaces and Nanostructures Division of the American AVS. Dr. Lukaszew has published over 100 articles in peer-reviewed journals and has presented many invited talks at several international conferences.