Ferromagnetic resonators synthesized by metal-organic decomposition epitaxy.
Nhat NguyenBryce HerringtonKayetan ChorazewiczSzu-Fan WangRuthi Linnea ZielinskiJohn TurnerPaul AshbyUfuk KilicEva SchubertMathias SchubertRonald ParrottAllen SweetRobert StreubelPublished in: Journal of physics. Condensed matter : an Institute of Physics journal (2023)
Metal-organic decomposition epitaxy is an economical wet-chemical approach suitable to synthesize high-quality low-spin-damping films for resonator and oscillator applications. This work reports the temperature dependence of ferromagnetic resonances and associated structural and magnetic quantities of yttrium iron garnet nanofilms that coincide with single-crystal values. Despite imperfections originating from wet-chemical deposition and spin coating, the quality factor for out-of-plane and in-plane resonances approaches 600 and 1,000, respectively, at room temperature and 40 GHz. These values increase with temperature and are 100 times larger than those offered by commercial devices based on CMOS voltage-controlled oscillators at comparable production costs.