Abstract

Hysteresis of ferromagnetic system exhibits a fundamental stimulus-response behavior, thereby casting all the important macromagnetic system parameters such as coercivity, nucleation field, saturation magnetization, and hysteresis loss. Recently, increasing attention has been paid to exploration of relatively less understood minor loop behavior, since faster operation of magnetic devices is inevitably accompanied by minor hysteresis behavior from cycling among unsaturated ferromagnetic states. Here, we report our microscopic investigation of unusual minor hysteresis loop behavior, represented by rounded or sharpened response of minor hysteresis loop of (CoFeB/Pd)4 multilayer film. It is observed that rounded and sharpened response in the minor hysteresis response could be manifested under proper conditions. The minor loop behavior has been systematically investigated by direct microscopic magnetic domain observation using magneto-optical Kerr microscopy. The rounded response of magnetization at the reversing external field along the minor hysteresis curve, so far neglected or considered as one of ‘unusual’ behaviors, has been found to be elaborately controllable by tuning the reversing field strength and the field sweep rate for multilayers with low repeat numbers. Variable roundedness of the minor hysteresis loop is understandable based on the analysis of magnetic domain dynamics such as domain nucleation and the domain wall velocity.

Highlights

  • Ferroic materials exhibit a hysteresis loop[1]

  • To measure the major loop, the applied field was ramped between +250 Oe and −250 Oe with the maximum applied field has been checked to be strong enough to saturate the film at this sweep rate without leaving any unreversed microscopic magnetic domains within the field of view

  • The previous work reported the rounded response involved with ΔMafter[5], while the present study comprehensively explores the whole region around the Hr by considering both ΔMafter and ΔMbefore

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Summary

Introduction

Ferroic materials exhibit a hysteresis loop[1]. in ferromagnetic materials, hysteresis plays a key role in understanding the macroscopic nature of the ferromagnetic system, where a hysteresis response depends strongly on a magnetic field history[2].

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