Proximity effects in conical-ferromagnet/superconductor bilayers

Chien Te Wu, Oriol T. Valls, Klaus Halterman

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Abstract

We present a study of various aspects of proximity effects in F/S (ferromagnet/superconductor) bilayers, where F has a spiral magnetic texture such as that found in holmium, erbium, and other materials, and S is a conventional s-wave superconductor. We numerically solve the Bogoliubov-de Gennes (BdG) equations self-consistently and use the solutions to compute physical quantities relevant to the proximity effects in these bilayers. We obtain the relation between the superconducting transition temperature T c and the thicknesses dF of the magnetic layer by solving the linearized BdG equations. We find that the Tc(dF) curves include multiple oscillations. Moreover, the system may be reentrant not only with dF, as is the case when the magnet is uniform, but also with temperature T: the superconductivity disappears in certain ranges of d F or T. The T reentrance reported here occurs when dF is larger than the spatial period of the conical exchange field. We compute the condensation free energies and entropies from the full BdG equations and find the results are in agreement with Tc values obtained by linearization. The inhomogeneous nature of the magnet makes it possible for all odd triplet pairing components to be induced. We have investigated their properties and found that, as compared to the singlet amplitude, both the m=0 and ±1 triplet components exhibit long-range penetration. For nanoscale bilayers, the proximity lengths for both layers are also obtained. These lengths oscillate with dF and they are found to be long range on both sides. These results are shown to be consistent with recent experiments. We also calculate the reverse proximity effect described by the three-dimensional local magnetization, and the local density of states, which reveals important energy-resolved signatures associated with the proximity effects.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number184517
JournalPhysical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics
Volume86
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 30 2012

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