Abstract

The two deposition conditions are (a) Si(100)/Fe40Pd40B20(X Å)/ZnO (500 Å) and (b) Si(100)/ZnO(500 Å)/Fe40Pd40B20(Y Å), where X and Y are 25 Å, 50 Å, 75 Å, and 100 Å. The sputtering sequence and the thickness of the FePdB film were varied to examine their effects on the low-frequency alternative-current magnetic susceptibility (χac), maximum phase angle (θmax), maximum χac with corresponding optimal resonance frequency (fres), and electrical resistivity (ρ). Experimental results show that ZnO(500 Å)/Fe40Pd40B20(Y Å) is superior to Fe40Pd40B20(X Å)/ZnO(500 Å) because the ZnO(002) texture at the bottom can improve the magneto nanocrystalline anisotropy of Fe40Pd40B20, improving its magnetic properties. In particular, a comparison of high-resolution cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy observations of Fe40Pd40B20(100 Å)/ZnO(500 Å) and ZnO(500 Å)/Fe40Pd40B20(100 Å) demonstrates that the ZnO(002) texture induces a magneto nanocrystalline anisotropy in the nanocrystalline FePdB layer of ZnO(500 Å)/Fe40Pd40B20(100 Å), yielding a highest χac of approximately 2.8 with an fres of 1000 Hz and an θmax of 169°. Additionally, the ρ is reduced as the FePdB thickness increases, because grain boundaries and the surface of thin films scatter the electrons, so thinner films have a greater resistance. The ρ of ZnO(500 Å)/Fe40Pd40B20(Y Å) is lower than that of Fe40Pd40B20(X Å)/ZnO(500 Å) because stronger ZnO crystallization and nanocrystalline FePdB improve the scattering of electrons by the surface of the films.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call