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Ion beam modification of magnetic tunnel junctions

Authors :
Teixeira, B. M. S.
Timopheev, A. A.
Caçoilo, N.
Cuchet, L.
Mondaud, J.
Childress, J. R.
Magalhães, S.
Alves, E.
Sobolev, N. A.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The impact of 400 keV $Ar^+$ ion irradiation on the magnetic and electrical properties of in-plane magnetized magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) stacks was investigated by ferromagnetic resonance, vibrating sample magnetometry and current-in-plane tunneling techniques. The irradiation-induced changes of the magnetic anisotropy, coupling energies and tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) exhibited a correlated dependence on the ion fluence, which allowed us to distinguish between two irradiation regimes. In the low-fluence regime, ${\Phi} < 10^{14} cm^{-2}$, the parameters required for having a functioning MTJ were preserved: the anisotropy of the FeCoB free layer (FL) was weakly modulated following a small decrease in the saturation magnetization $M_S$; the TMR decreased continuously; the interlayer exchange coupling (IEC) and the exchange bias (EB) decreased slightly. In the high-fluence regime, ${\Phi} > 10^{14} cm^{-2}$, the MTJ was rendered inoperative: the modulation of the FL anisotropy was strong, caused by a strong decrease in $M_S$, ascribed to a high degree of interface intermixing between the FL and the Ta capping; the EB and IEC were also lost, likely due to intermixing of the layers composing the synthetic antiferromagnet; and the TMR vanished due to the irradiation-induced deterioration of the MgO barrier and MgO/FeCoB interfaces. We demonstrate that the layers surrounding the FL play a decisive role in determining the trend of the magnetic anisotropy evolution resulting from the irradiation, and that an ion-fluence window exists where such a modulation of magnetic anisotropy can occur, while not losing the TMR or the magnetic configuration of the MTJ.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, Supplemental material with 8 pages, 9 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2004.05025
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6463/aba38c