Impact of current-induced magnons on spin-orbit torque analysis
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 18:16 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A magnon-related spin-flip unidirectional magnetoresistance appears in second-harmonic Hall data and must be included to accurately extract spin-orbit torques.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In permalloy/platinum bilayers the second-harmonic Hall resistance contains a magnon-related spin-flip unidirectional magnetoresistance term whose field dependence deviates from the simple 1/H form expected for pure spin-orbit torque; including this term is required to obtain accurate torque estimates over an extended field range.
What carries the argument
The magnon-related spin-flip unidirectional magnetoresistance contribution to the second-harmonic Hall resistance, which carries the field-dependent correction that must be separated from the torque signals.
If this is right
- Spin-orbit torque values reported from second-harmonic Hall measurements on similar bilayers will shift once the unidirectional magnetoresistance term is included.
- Fitting routines must now span a broad field range instead of relying on the high-field limit alone.
- The same magnon contribution is expected to appear in other ferromagnetic/heavy-metal stacks where current-induced magnons are present.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The correction may be largest at lower fields and room temperature, suggesting that low-temperature or high-damping material choices could reduce the effect.
- Re-analysis of published torque data on permalloy-based devices could reveal systematic offsets traceable to this term.
- Device-level simulations that treat magnon generation self-consistently might be needed to predict the size of the correction in new geometries.
Load-bearing premise
The observed deviations from the expected 1/H field dependence in the second-harmonic Hall signal are produced by the magnon-related unidirectional magnetoresistance rather than by any other thermal or interfacial mechanism.
What would settle it
If the second-harmonic Hall data continue to deviate from the torque model after the unidirectional magnetoresistance term is subtracted, or if the same deviations persist in samples where magnon generation is suppressed while other mechanisms remain, the claimed necessity of the magnon term would be falsified.
Figures
read the original abstract
The second-harmonic Hall technique is a widely used, sensitive method for studying the spin-orbit torques generated by charge current. It exploits the dependence of the Hall resistance on the magnetization direction, although thermal phenomena also contribute. Historically, deviations from the expected magnetic field dependence have usually been neglected. Based on our studies on permalloy/platinum bilayers, we show that a counterpart to the magnon-related spin-flip unidirectional magnetoresistance - known to appear in the second-harmonic longitudinal resistance - appears in the Hall data, and that describing the results in a wide field range with these contributions is essential to accurately estimate the torques.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript studies second-harmonic Hall resistance measurements on permalloy/platinum bilayers and reports that a magnon-related spin-flip unidirectional magnetoresistance term, analogous to the known longitudinal effect, appears in the Hall channel. It argues that this term, together with other contributions, must be included when fitting data over a wide magnetic-field range in order to obtain accurate spin-orbit torque values; historical analyses that neglected field-dependent deviations are therefore claimed to be incomplete.
Significance. If the functional form used to separate the magnon unidirectional magnetoresistance from the torque-induced signals is shown to be both necessary and unique, the result would affect quantitative extraction of damping-like and field-like torques in common heavy-metal/ferromagnet stacks, a central quantity in spintronics device design.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the statement that 'describing the results in a wide field range with these contributions is essential to accurately estimate the torques' is not supported by any quantitative demonstration, error bars, or explicit fitting equations showing that the proposed magnon term improves the fit beyond what other field-dependent mechanisms (thermal gradients, Oersted-field mixing) would achieve.
- [Results/Discussion] The central attribution of Hall deviations to magnon unidirectional magnetoresistance rests on the assumption that the chosen functional form is the minimal and unique description; no explicit test is described that rules out alternative field-dependent terms while preserving the extracted torque values.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major point below and have revised the manuscript to incorporate additional quantitative support and explicit tests where feasible.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the statement that 'describing the results in a wide field range with these contributions is essential to accurately estimate the torques' is not supported by any quantitative demonstration, error bars, or explicit fitting equations showing that the proposed magnon term improves the fit beyond what other field-dependent mechanisms (thermal gradients, Oersted-field mixing) would achieve.
Authors: We acknowledge that the abstract claim would be strengthened by explicit quantitative evidence. The original manuscript demonstrates that the magnon-related term allows consistent torque extraction over a broad field range where simpler models fail, but we agree more direct comparisons are needed. In the revised version we have added the explicit fitting equations for the second-harmonic Hall resistance, error bars on the extracted damping-like and field-like torques with and without the magnon term, and a quantitative comparison of fit quality (reduced chi-squared values) against models that include only thermal gradients or Oersted-field mixing. These additions show that the magnon term yields both lower residuals and field-independent torque values, supporting the original statement. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Results/Discussion] The central attribution of Hall deviations to magnon unidirectional magnetoresistance rests on the assumption that the chosen functional form is the minimal and unique description; no explicit test is described that rules out alternative field-dependent terms while preserving the extracted torque values.
Authors: The functional form follows directly from the established magnon spin-flip unidirectional magnetoresistance observed in the longitudinal channel and the symmetry of the Hall geometry. Nevertheless, we agree that an explicit test against alternatives strengthens the claim. The revised manuscript now includes a direct comparison of several candidate field-dependent terms (thermal, Oersted mixing, and phenomenological polynomials). We show that while some alternatives can reduce residuals in limited field windows, they either produce unphysical field dependence in the extracted torques or fail to describe the full data set, whereas the magnon term maintains physically reasonable, field-independent torque values. We note that proving absolute uniqueness for any phenomenological term is difficult; the added tests nevertheless demonstrate necessity for reliable extraction over wide fields. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation relies on experimental fitting rather than self-referential construction
full rationale
The paper's central claim rests on experimental observation that a magnon-related unidirectional magnetoresistance term appears in second-harmonic Hall data for Py/Pt bilayers and must be included to fit wide-field dependence and extract torques accurately. No equations, self-citations, or model definitions in the provided abstract reduce the torque estimates to the same fitted magnon parameters by construction, nor do they present a fitted term as an independent prediction. The separation of contributions is described as a fitting procedure over a broad field range, which is a standard non-circular approach when the functional forms are independently motivated and the model is tested for necessity. This is consistent with the reader's assessment of low circularity and the absence of any load-bearing self-citation or ansatz smuggling.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- magnon amplitude coefficient
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The functional form of the magnon-related unidirectional magnetoresistance derived for longitudinal resistance also applies to the Hall channel.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
We propose that it also appears in R2ωxy measurements, in coefficients A and B. ... Xu(H) = Xu0 (K/H)^p
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
The second-harmonic Hall technique is a widely used, sensitive method for studying the spin-orbit torques generated by charge current.
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
B. Dieny, I. L. Prejbeanu, K. Garello, P. Gambardella, P. Freitas, R. Lehndorff, W. Raberg, U. Ebels, S. O. Demokritov, J. Akerman, A. Deac, P. Pirro, C. Adel- mann, A. Anane, A. V. Chumak, A. Hirohata, S. Man- gin, S. O. Valenzuela, M. C. Onba¸ slı, M. D’Aquino, G. Prenat, G. Finocchio, L. Lopez-Diaz, R. Chantrell, O. Chubykalo-Fesenko, and P. Bortolotti...
work page 2020
-
[2]
V. Krizakova, M. Perumkunnil, S. Couet, P. Gam- bardella, and K. Garello, Spin-orbit torque switching of magnetic tunnel junctions for memory applications, Jour- nal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 562, 169692 (2022)
work page 2022
- [3]
- [4]
- [5]
-
[6]
C. Bi, N. Sato, and S. X. Wang, Spin-orbit torque mag- netoresistive random-access memory (SOT-MRAM), in Woodhead Publishing Series in Electronic and Optical Materials, edited by B. Magyari-K¨ ope, Y. B. T. A. i. N.-V. M. Nishi, and S. T. S. Edition) (Woodhead Pub- lishing, 2019) pp. 203–235
work page 2019
-
[7]
A. Manchon, J. ˇZelezn´ y, I. M. Miron, T. Jungwirth, J. Sinova, A. Thiaville, K. Garello, and P. Gambardella, Current-induced spin-orbit torques in ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic systems, Rev. Mod. Phys. 91, 35004 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[8]
V. D. Nguyen, S. Rao, K. Wostyn, and S. Couet, Recent progress in spin-orbit torque magnetic random-access memory, npj Spintronics 2, 48 (2024)
work page 2024
-
[9]
L. Liu, T. Moriyama, D. C. Ralph, and R. A. Buhrman, Spin-Torque Ferromagnetic Resonance Induced by the Spin Hall Effect, Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 36601 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[10]
S. Karimeddiny, J. A. Mittelstaedt, R. A. Buhrman, and D. C. Ralph, Transverse and Longitudinal Spin-Torque Ferromagnetic Resonance for Improved Measurement of Spin-Orbit Torque, Phys. Rev. Appl. 14, 24024 (2020)
work page 2020
-
[11]
K. Garello, I. M. Miron, C. O. Avci, F. Freimuth, Y. Mokrousov, S. Bl¨ ugel, S. Auffret, O. Boulle, G. Gaudin, and P. Gambardella, Symmetry and magni- tude of spin–orbit torques in ferromagnetic heterostruc- tures, Nature Nanotechnology 8, 587 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[12]
M. Hayashi, J. Kim, M. Yamanouchi, and H. Ohno, Quantitative characterization of the spin-orbit torque us- ing harmonic Hall voltage measurements, Physical Re- view B 89, 144425 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[13]
X. Fan, J. Wu, Y. Chen, M. J. Jerry, H. Zhang, and J. Q. Xiao, Observation of the nonlocal spin-orbital effective 8 field, Nature Communications 4, 1799 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[14]
M. I. Dyakonov, ed., Spin Physics in Semiconductors (Springer International Publishing, 2017)
work page 2017
-
[15]
O. Mosendz, J. E. Pearson, F. Y. Fradin, G. E. W. Bauer, S. D. Bader, and A. Hoffmann, Quantifying Spin Hall Angles from Spin Pumping: Experiments and Theory, Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 46601 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[16]
U. H. Pi, K. Won Kim, J. Y. Bae, S. C. Lee, Y. J. Cho, K. S. Kim, and S. Seo, Tilting of the spin orientation induced by Rashba effect in ferromagnetic metal layer, Applied Physics Letters 97, 162507 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[17]
K.-U. Demasius, T. Phung, W. Zhang, B. P. Hughes, S.- H. Yang, A. Kellock, W. Han, A. Pushp, and S. S. P. Parkin, Enhanced spin–orbit torques by oxygen incor- poration in tungsten films, Nature Communications 7, 10644 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[18]
Y. Wang, T. Taniguchi, P.-H. Lin, D. Zicchino, A. Nickl, J. Sahliger, C.-H. Lai, C. Song, H. Wu, Q. Dai, and C. H. Back, Time-resolved detection of spin–orbit torque switching of magnetization and exchange bias, Nature Electronics 5, 840 (2022)
work page 2022
-
[19]
H. Yang, S. O. Valenzuela, M. Chshiev, S. Couet, B. Di- eny, B. Dlubak, A. Fert, K. Garello, M. Jamet, D.- E. Jeong, K. Lee, T. Lee, M.-B. Martin, G. S. Kar, P. S´ en´ eor, H.-J. Shin, and S. Roche, Two-dimensional materials prospects for non-volatile spintronic memories, Nature 606, 663 (2022)
work page 2022
-
[20]
T. Guillet, R. Galceran, J. F. Sierra, F. J. Belarre, B. Ballesteros, M. V. Costache, D. Dosenovic, H. Okuno, A. Marty, M. Jamet, F. Bonell, and S. O. Valen- zuela, Spin–Orbit Torques and Magnetization Switch- ing in (Bi,Sb)2Te3/Fe3GeTe2 Heterostructures Grown by Molecular Beam Epitaxy, Nano Letters 24, 822 (2024)
work page 2024
-
[21]
L. Pandey, B. Zhao, K. Tenzin, R. Ngaloy, V. Lam- parsk´ a, H. Bangar, A. Ali, M. Abdel-Hafiez, G. Zhang, H. Wu, H. Chang, L. Sj¨ ostr¨ om, P. Rout, J. S lawi´ nska, and S. P. Dash, Energy-efficient field-free unconven- tional spin-orbit torque magnetization switching dynam- ics in van der Waals heterostructures, arxiv preprint 2408.13095 (2024)
-
[22]
M. H. D. Guimar˜ aes, G. M. Stiehl, D. MacNeill, N. D. Reynolds, and D. C. Ralph, Spin–Orbit Torques in NbSe2/Permalloy Bilayers, Nano Letters 18, 1311 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[23]
Q. Shao, G. Yu, Y. W. Lan, Y. Shi, M. Y. Li, C. Zheng, X. Zhu, L. J. Li, P. K. Amiri, and K. L. Wang, Strong Rashba-Edelstein Effect-Induced Spin- Orbit Torques in Monolayer Transition Metal Dichalco- genide/Ferromagnet Bilayers, Nano Letters 16, 7514 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[24]
D. MacNeill, G. M. Stiehl, M. H. D. Guimaraes, R. A. Buhrman, J. Park, and D. C. Ralph, Control of spin–orbit torques through crystal symmetry in WTe2/ferromagnet bilayers, Nature Physics 13, 300 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[25]
M. Alghamdi, M. Lohmann, J. Li, P. R. Jothi, Q. Shao, M. Aldosary, T. Su, B. P. T. Fokwa, and J. Shi, Highly Ef- ficient Spin–Orbit Torque and Switching of Layered Fer- romagnet Fe3GeTe2, Nano Letters 19, 4400 (2019)
work page 2019
-
[26]
J. Hidding and M. H. Guimar¨ aes, Spin-Orbit Torques in Transition Metal Dichalcogenide/Ferromagnet Het- erostructures, Frontiers in Materials 7, 594771 (2020)
work page 2020
-
[27]
L. Bainsla, B. Zhao, N. Behera, A. M. Hoque, L. Sj¨ ostr¨ om, A. Martinelli, M. Abdel-Hafiez, J.˚Akerman, and S. P. Dash, Large out-of-plane spin–orbit torque in topological Weyl semimetal TaIrTe4, Nature Communi- cations 15, 4649 (2024)
work page 2024
-
[28]
C. O. Avci, K. Garello, M. Gabureac, A. Ghosh, A. Fuhrer, S. F. Alvarado, and P. Gambardella, Inter- play of spin-orbit torque and thermoelectric effects in ferromagnet/normal-metal bilayers, Physical Review B 90, 224427 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[29]
G. E. Bauer, E. Saitoh, and B. J. Van Wees, Spin caloritronics, Nature Materials 11, 391 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[30]
B. L. Zink, Thermal effects in spintronic materials and devices: An experimentalist’s guide, Journal of Mag- netism and Magnetic Materials 564, 170120 (2022)
work page 2022
-
[31]
C. O. Avci, K. Garello, A. Ghosh, M. Gabureac, S. F. Alvarado, and P. Gambardella, Unidirectional spin Hall magnetoresistance in ferromagnet/normal metal bilayers, Nature Physics 11, 570 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[32]
S. Langenfeld, V. Tshitoyan, Z. Fang, A. Wells, T. A. Moore, and A. J. Ferguson, Exchange magnon induced resistance asymmetry in permalloy spin-Hall oscillators, Applied Physics Letters 108, 192402 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[33]
T. Li, S. Kim, S. J. Lee, S. W. Lee, T. Koyama, D. Chiba, T. Moriyama, K. J. Lee, K. J. Kim, and T. Ono, Origin of threshold current density for asymmetric magnetore- sistance in Pt/Py bilayers, Applied Physics Express 10, 073001 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[34]
C. O. Avci, J. Mendil, G. S. Beach, and P. Gambardella, Origins of the Unidirectional Spin Hall Magnetoresis- tance in Metallic Bilayers, Physical Review Letters 121, 087207 (2018)
work page 2018
- [35]
-
[36]
P. Ritzinger and K. V´ yborn´ y, Anisotropic magnetoresis- tance: materials, models and applications, Royal Society Open Science 10, 230564 (2023)
work page 2023
-
[37]
J. Kim, P. Sheng, S. Takahashi, S. Mitani, and M. Hayashi, Spin Hall Magnetoresistance in Metallic Bi- layers, Physical Review Letters 116, 097201 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[38]
S. V´ elez, V. N. Golovach, A. Bedoya-Pinto, M. Isasa, E. Sagasta, M. Abadia, C. Rogero, L. E. Hueso, F. S. Bergeret, and F. Casanova, Hanle Magnetoresistance in Thin Metal Films with Strong Spin-Orbit Coupling, Physical Review Letters 116, 016603 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[39]
Y. Yang, Z. Luo, H. Wu, Y. Xu, R. W. Li, S. J. Pen- nycook, S. Zhang, and Y. Wu, Anomalous Hall magne- toresistance in a ferromagnet, Nature Communications 9, 2255 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[40]
T. G. Rijks, S. Lenczowski, and R. Coehoorn, In- plane and out-of-plane anisotropic magnetoresistance in Ni80Fe20 thin films, Physical Review B 56, 362 (1997)
work page 1997
-
[41]
A. Kobs, S. Heße, W. Kreuzpaintner, G. Winkler, D. Lott, P. Weinberger, A. Schreyer, and H. P. Oepen, Anisotropic interface magnetoresistance in Pt/Co/Pt sandwiches, Physical Review Letters 106, 217207 (2011)
work page 2011
-
[42]
M. G. Kang, G. Go, K. W. Kim, J. G. Choi, B. G. Park, and K. J. Lee, Negative spin Hall magnetoresistance of normal metal/ferromagnet bilayers, Nature Communica- tions 11, 3619 (2020)
work page 2020
-
[43]
A. P. Mihai, J. P. Attan´ e, A. Marty, P. Warin, and Y. Samson, Electron-magnon diffusion and magnetiza- tion reversal detection in FePt thin films, Physical Re- view B 77, 060401 (2008)
work page 2008
-
[44]
D. MacNeill, G. M. Stiehl, M. H. D. Guimar˜ aes, N. D. 9 Reynolds, R. A. Buhrman, and D. C. Ralph, Thickness dependence of spin-orbit torques generated by WTe 2, Phys. Rev. B 96, 54450 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[45]
C. O. Avci, K. Garello, J. Mendil, A. Ghosh, N. Blasakis, M. Gabureac, M. Trassin, M. Fiebig, and P. Gambardella, Magnetoresistance of heavy and light metal/ferromagnet bilayers, Applied Physics Let- ters 107, 192405 (2015)
work page 2015
- [46]
- [47]
-
[48]
Y. Xu, Y. Yang, Z. Luo, and Y. Wu, Disentangling magnon magnetoresistance from anisotropic and spin Hall magnetoresistance in NiFe/Pt bilayers, Physical Re- view B 100, 094413 (2019)
work page 2019
- [49]
- [50]
-
[51]
We note that K in the numerator is added for the conve- nience of having a simple unit, Ω for the coefficients
-
[52]
L. Chen, K. Zollner, S. Parzefall, J. Schmitt, M. Kro- nseder, J. Fabian, D. Weiss, and C. H. Back, Connections between spin-orbit torques and unidirectional magnetore- sistance in ferromagnetic-metal-heavy-metal heterostruc- tures, Physical Review B 105, L020406 (2022)
work page 2022
-
[53]
K. Ounadjela, H. Lefakis, V. S. Speriosu, C. Hwang, and P. S. Alexopoulos, Thickness dependence of magnetiza- tion and magnetostriction of NiFe and NiFeRh films, Le Journal de Physique Colloques 49, 1709 (1988)
work page 1988
-
[54]
L. Liu, R. A. Buhrman, and D. C. Ralph, Review and Analysis of Measurements of the Spin Hall Effect in Plat- inum, arxiv preprint 1111.3702v3 (2011)
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2011
-
[55]
L. Zhu, D. C. Ralph, and R. A. Buhrman, Maximizing spin-orbit torque generated by the spin Hall effect of Pt, Applied Physics Reviews 8, 031308 (2021)
work page 2021
- [56]
-
[57]
L. Neumann and M. Meinert, Influence of the Hall-bar ge- ometry on harmonic Hall voltage measurements of spin- orbit torques, AIP Advances 8, 95320 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[58]
Y. Pu, E. Johnston-Halperin, D. D. Awschalom, and J. Shi, Anisotropic Thermopower and Planar Nernst Effect in Ga 1−xMnxAs Ferromagnetic Semiconductors, Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 36601 (2006)
work page 2006
-
[59]
K. I. Uchida, H. Adachi, T. Ota, H. Nakayama, S. Maekawa, and E. Saitoh, Observation of longitudi- nal spin-Seebeck effect in magnetic insulators, Applied Physics Letters 97, 172505 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[60]
A. Slachter, F. L. Bakker, J. P. Adam, and B. J. Van Wees, Thermally driven spin injection from a ferromag- net into a non-magnetic metal, Nature Physics 6, 879 (2010)
work page 2010
- [61]
-
[62]
The Stoner-Wohlfarth model The Stoner-Wohlfarth (SW) model describes the classical energy formula of a uniform, single-domain ferromagnet with saturated magnetization. For a Py film with easy-plane anisotropy and rotational sym- metry around the z axis, we expect that the azimuthal angles of the magnetization and the field are equal (φ = φH, measured from...
-
[63]
The effective fields are, therefore, HFL = HFLσ and HAD = HADM × σ
SOT via 2ω Hall measurements In a high-symmetry system such as Pt, the polarization or current of a spinσ can generate both a field-like (FL) and an anti-damping-like (AD) torque in a magnet: τFL = γHFLM × σ, (S4a) τAD = γHADM × (M × σ) (S4b) where HFL,AD are the magnitudes of the SOT fields proportional to the current, γ is the gyromagnetic ratio, and M ...
-
[64]
Additional experimental data a) b) c) d) e) f) g) h) 0.4 0.2 0.0 80400 120 1.41.00.6 100 140 80 0.0 0.2 0.4 80400 1.41.00.6 120 100 140 80 0.0 0.2 0.4 80400 120 100 140 1.41.00.6 0.0 0.4 0.8 80400 320 240 400 1.41.00.6 FIG. S1. a-d) Coefficient A as a function of ( µ0H)−1 measured on four other samples. f-h) Coefficient B as a function of (µ0(H + K))−1 on...
-
[65]
Possible corrections Here we list the possible corrections we have considered but do not help explain the deviations from Eq. 3
-
[66]
3 is based on the small-SOT-field limit, i.e
Eq. 3 is based on the small-SOT-field limit, i.e. the assumption that the modulations ∆ θ, ∆φ of the magnetization direction are small. Both the inadequate fits based on Eq. 3 and the good fits based on the methods detailed in the main text generally produce µ0HAD < 9 mT ≪ µ0(H + K) and µ0(HFL) < 12 0.5 mT ≪ H. As a result, ∆ θ < 1° and ∆φ <2° (see SI Sec...
-
[67]
FL and AD torques from other spin orientations ( σ ∥ x, z axes) produce different angle-dependence compared to Eq. 2. They can be excluded as the equation describes all our samples well with small corrections. Rather, the deviations lie in the field-dependence of our data
-
[68]
However, it only contributes to coefficients B, D in Eq
The ordinary Nernst effect produces an electric field E ∝ ∇T ×H and is, therefore, linear in H. However, it only contributes to coefficients B, D in Eq. 2 while A, C are unaffected, and its effect on the fit quality to the former is negligible
-
[69]
This introduces additional angle-dependence compared to Eq
Anisotropic magnetothermopower and the planar Nernst effect may produce electric fields Ex,y with cos 2φ, sin 2φ terms in the presence of finite ∇T [30, 31, 58]. This introduces additional angle-dependence compared to Eq. 2. However, when allowing for such terms in the fit, they are negligible compared to the rest, moreover, they are expected to be indepe...
-
[70]
Spins generated by ∇T , together with a spin-charge conversion, would produce an electric field with 2 ω. For example, in the spin-dependent Seebeck effect the out-of-plane ∇T generates a parallel spin current polarized ∥ M, and the inverse SHE enables voltage detection, so VSSE ∝ θSH∇T × M where θSH is the spin Hall angle [28, 29, 59, 60]. However, simil...
-
[71]
We considered the idea whether the Stoner-Wohlfarth modeling of the dominant easy-plane anisotropy (Eq. S1), which leads to Eq. 3b, requires corrections. We have measured Rxy(θH) in the vicinity of θH = π/2 for a series of H, and found that the results for RA and K are consistent with those evaluated based on Rxy(Hz) (Fig. 1), therefore the model holds in...
-
[72]
Chip misalignment can include a small, constant difference between φ and φH, but it is easily accounted for by an offset during fitting. It can also include an inclination, so that when the chip is rotated in the magnet at nominally θH = π/2, a small, φH-dependent Hz field appears. However, this only leads to a small correction to Eq. 1, and does not affe...
-
[73]
With the proposition RP ∝ M 2 [46, 61] and looking at RP (H) plotted in Fig
The size of the magnetization likely depends on the field H, therefore the anomalous Nernst effect RANE ∝ ∇T × M is not constant, as usually assumed. With the proposition RP ∝ M 2 [46, 61] and looking at RP (H) plotted in Fig. S3, we estimate that the equilibrium M changes by approximately 4% over the field range studied here. Following the 2HH fits inclu...
-
[74]
Uniaxial anisotropy During a field sweep the magnetization reorientation occurs in the zero-field region, which we estimate to be approximately 10 mT wide based on the sharp dip in Rxx,xy(H) around H = 0 (see Fig. 1c)). Therefore, we limited our measurements to higher fields. The first harmonics are, at first glance, well fitted by Eq. 1 (see Fig. 1d)), w...
-
[75]
Therefore, at θ = π/2, following Refs
SF-UMR as a modulation of the magnetization Magnon generation and annihilation depends on the angle of the magnetization and the current-induced spins via σ · M = sin θ sin φ for the case of Pt/Py interface where M is the dimensionless magnetization. Therefore, at θ = π/2, following Refs. 46, 47, the magnetization is M(I) = 1 − ∆M(I) sinφ. (S14) The relat...
-
[76]
The effect of chip misalignment for in-plane rotations In general, the chip plane ( xy) is likely to be slightly misaligned to (not perfectly parallel with) the electromagnet axis (the applied field) during in-plane rotation with φH, and θH = π/2 is not exact. When the chip is rotated in its xy plane relative to the field, this means that the field H rela...
-
[77]
Out-of-plane rotations As we have discussed before in detail, the first harmonic resistances for in-plane rotations have been measured at a series of fields and, using Eq. 1 and the SW-model, we have confirmed the easy-plane nature of the magnetization in Py, albeit with a weak anisotropy. Below we confirm the predictions of the SW model (Eq. S1) regardin...
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.