Abstract

Josephson junctions containing ferromagnetic (F) materials have been the subject of intense study over the past two decades. The ground state of such junctions oscillates between 0 and π as the thickness of the ferromagnetic layer increases. For some applications, it might be beneficial to replace a very thin F layer with an unbalanced synthetic antiferromagnet (SAF) consisting of two F layers of different thicknesses whose magnetizations are coupled antiparallel to each other. According to theory, such a system should behave similarly to a single F layer whose thickness is equal to the difference of the two F-layer thicknesses in the SAF. We test that theoretical prediction with Josephson junctions containing unbalanced Ni/Ru/Ni SAFs, keeping the thickness of one layer fixed at 2.0 nm and varying the thickness of the other layer between 2.0 and 5.0 nm. We observe the first 0−π transition at a thickness difference of 0.86 nm, which closely matches the position of the transition observed previously using single Ni layers.

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