Magnetoresistanceis the tendency of a material (oftenferromagnetic) to change the value of itselectrical resistancein an externally-appliedmagnetic field.There are a variety of effects that can be called magnetoresistance. Some occur in bulk non-magnetic metals and semiconductors, such as geometrical magnetoresistance,Shubnikov–de Haas oscillations,or the common positive magnetoresistance in metals.[1]Other effects occur in magnetic metals, such as negative magnetoresistance in ferromagnets[2]or anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR). Finally, in multicomponent or multilayer systems (e.g. magnetic tunnel junctions),giant magnetoresistance(GMR),tunnel magnetoresistance(TMR),colossal magnetoresistance(CMR), andextraordinary magnetoresistance(EMR) can be observed.
The first magnetoresistive effect was discovered in 1856 byWilliam Thomson,better known as Lord Kelvin, but he was unable to lower the electrical resistance of anything by more than 5%. Today, systems includingsemimetals[3]and concentric ringEMRstructures are known. In these, a magnetic field can adjust the resistance by orders of magnitude. Since different mechanisms can alter the resistance, it is useful to separately consider situations where it depends on a magnetic field directly (e.g. geometric magnetoresistance and multiband magnetoresistance) and those where it does so indirectly through magnetization (e.g. AMR andTMR).
Discovery
editWilliam Thomson (Lord Kelvin)first discovered ordinary magnetoresistance in 1856.[4]He experimented with pieces of iron and discovered that the resistance increases when the current is in the same direction as the magnetic force and decreases when the current is at 90° to the magnetic force. He then did the same experiment with nickel and found that it was affected in the same way but the magnitude of the effect was greater. This effect is referred to as anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR).
In 2007,Albert FertandPeter Grünbergwere jointly awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery ofgiant magnetoresistance.[5]
Geometrical magnetoresistance
editAn example of magnetoresistance due to direct action of magnetic field on electric current can be studied on a Corbino disc (see Figure). It consists of a conducting annulus with perfectly conducting rims. Without a magnetic field, the battery drives a radial current between the rims. When a magnetic field perpendicular to the plane of the annulus is applied, (either into or out of the page) a circular component of current flows as well, due toLorentz force.Initial interest in this problem began with Boltzmann in 1886, and independently was re-examined by Corbino in 1911.[6]
In a simple model, supposing the response to the Lorentz force is the same as for an electric field, the carrier velocityvis given by: whereμis thecarrier mobility.Solving for the velocity, we find:
where the effective reduction in mobility due to theB-field (for motion perpendicular to this field) is apparent. Electric current (proportional to the radial component of velocity) will decrease with increasing magnetic field and hence the resistance of the device will increase. Critically, this magnetoresistive scenario depends sensitively on the device geometry and current lines and it does not rely on magnetic materials.
In asemiconductorwith a single carrier type, the magnetoresistance is proportional to(1 + (μB)2),whereμis thesemiconductor mobility(units m2·V−1·s−1,equivalently m2·Wb−1,or T−1) andBis the magnetic field (unitsteslas).Indium antimonide,an example of a high mobility semiconductor, could have an electron mobility above4 m2/Wbat300K.So in a0.25 Tfield, for example the magnetoresistance increase would be 100%.
Anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR)
editThomson's experiments[4]are an example of AMR,[7]a property of a material in which a dependence of electrical resistance on the angle between the direction of electric current and direction ofmagnetizationis observed. The effect arises in most cases from the simultaneous action of magnetization andspin–orbit interaction(exceptions related to non-collinear magnetic order notwithstanding)[8]and its detailed mechanism depends on the material. It can be for example due to a larger probability of s-d scattering of electrons in the direction of magnetization (which is controlled by the applied magnetic field). The net effect (in most materials) is that the electrical resistance has maximum value when the direction of current is parallel to the applied magnetic field.[9]AMR of new materials is being investigated and magnitudes up to 50% have been observed in some uranium (but otherwise quite conventional) ferromagnetic compounds.[10]Materials with extreme AMR have been identified[11]driven by unconventional mechanisms such as a metal-insulator transition triggered by rotating the magnetic moments (while for some directions of magnetic moments, the system is semimetallic, for other directions a gap opens).
In polycrystalline ferromagnetic materials, the AMR can only depend on the angleφ=ψ−θbetween the magnetization and current direction and (as long as the resistivity of the material can be described by arank-two tensor), it must follow[12] whereρis the (longitudinal)resistivityof the film andρ∥,⟂are the resistivities forφ= 0°andφ= 90°,respectively. Associated with longitudinal resistivity, there is also transversal resistivity dubbed (somewhat confusingly[a]) the planar Hall effect. In monocrystals, resistivityρdepends also onψandθindividually.
To compensate for the non-linear characteristics and inability to detect the polarity of a magnetic field, the following structure is used for sensors. It consists of stripes of aluminum or gold placed on a thin film ofpermalloy(a ferromagnetic material exhibiting the AMR effect) inclined at an angle of 45°. This structure forces the current not to flow along the “easy axes” of thin film, but at an angle of 45°. The dependence of resistance now has a permanent offset which is linear around the null point. Because of its appearance, this sensor type is called 'barber pole'.
The AMR effect is used in a wide array of sensors for measurement of Earth's magnetic field (electroniccompass), for electric current measuring (by measuring the magnetic field created around the conductor), for traffic detection and for linear position and angle sensing. The biggest AMR sensor manufacturers areHoneywell,NXP Semiconductors,STMicroelectronics,andSensitec GmbH.
As theoretical aspects, I. A. Campbell, A. Fert, and O. Jaoul (CFJ)[13]derived an expression of the AMR ratio for Ni-based alloys using the two-current model with s-s and s-d scattering processes, where 's' is a conduction electron, and 'd' is 3d states with the spin-orbit interaction. The AMR ratio is expressed as withand,where,,andare a spin-orbit coupling constant (so-called), an exchange field, and a resistivity for spin,respectively. In addition, recently, Satoshi Kokado et al.[14][15]have obtained the general expression of the AMR ratio for 3d transition-metal ferromagnets by extending theCFJtheory to a more general one. The general expression can also be applied to half-metals.
See also
editFootnotes
edit- ^The (ordinary)Hall effectchanges sign upon magnetic field reversal and it is an orbital effect (unrelated to spin) due to the Lorentz force. Transversal AMR (planar Hall effect[16]) does not change sign and it is caused byspin-orbit interaction.
References
edit- ^Pippard, A.B. (1989).Magnetoresistance in Metals.Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-0-521-32660-5.
- ^Coleman, R.V.; Isin, A. (1966), "Magnetoresistance in Iron Single Crystals",Journal of Applied Physics,37(3): 1028–9,Bibcode:1966JAP....37.1028C,doi:10.1063/1.1708320
- ^"Unstoppable Magnetoresistance".
- ^abThomson, W. (18 June 1857), "On the Electro-Dynamic Qualities of Metals:—Effects of Magnetization on the Electric Conductivity of Nickel and of Iron",Proc. R. Soc. Lond.,8:546–550,doi:10.1098/rspl.1856.0144
- ^The Nobel Prize in Physics 2007,Nobel Media AB, 9 Oct 2007,retrieved25 Jun2014
- ^G Giuliani (2008). "A general law for electromagnetic induction".EPL.81(6): 60002.arXiv:1502.00502.Bibcode:2008EL.....8160002G.doi:10.1209/0295-5075/81/60002.S2CID14917438.
- ^Ritzinger, Philipp; Vyborny, Karel (2023)."Anisotropic magnetoresistance: Materials, models and applications".Royal Society Open Science.10(10).arXiv:2212.03700.Bibcode:2023RSOS...1030564R.doi:10.1098/rsos.230564.PMC10582618.PMID37859834.
- ^seeRitzinger & Vyborny (2023),§4.2.
- ^McGuire, T.; Potter, R. (1975)."Anisotropic magnetoresistance in ferromagnetic 3d alloys"(PDF).IEEE Transactions on Magnetics.11(4): 1018–38.Bibcode:1975ITM....11.1018M.doi:10.1109/TMAG.1975.1058782.
- ^Wiśniewski, P. (2007). "Giant anisotropic magnetoresistance and magnetothermopower in cubic 3:4 uranium pnictides".Applied Physics Letters.90(19): 192106.Bibcode:2007ApPhL..90s2106W.doi:10.1063/1.2737904.
- ^Yang, Huali (2021). "Colossal angular magnetoresistance in the antiferromagnetic semiconductor EuTe2".Phys. Rev. B.104(21): 214419.Bibcode:2021PhRvB.104u4419Y.doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.104.214419.S2CID245189642.
- ^De Ranieri, E.; Rushforth, A. W.; Výborný, K.; Rana, U.; Ahmed, E.; Campion, R. P.; Foxon, C. T.; Gallagher, B. L.; Irvine, A. C.; Wunderlich, J.; Jungwirth, T. (10 June 2008), "Lithographically and electrically controlled strain effects on anisotropic magnetoresistance in (Ga,Mn)As",New J. Phys.,10(6): 065003,arXiv:0802.3344,Bibcode:2008NJPh...10f5003D,doi:10.1088/1367-2630/10/6/065003,S2CID119291699
- ^Campbell, I. A.; Fert, A.; Jaoul, O. (1970). "The spontaneous resistivity anisotropy in Ni-based alloys".J. Phys. C.3(1S): S95–S101.Bibcode:1970JPhC....3S..95C.doi:10.1088/0022-3719/3/1S/310.
- ^Kokado, Satoshi; Tsunoda, Masakiyo; Harigaya, Kikuo; Sakuma, Akimasa (2012). "Anisotropic Magnetoresistance Effects in Fe, Co, Ni, Fe4N, and Half-Metallic Ferromagnet: A Systematic Analysis".J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.81(2): 024705–1–17.arXiv:1111.4864.Bibcode:2012JPSJ...81b4705K.doi:10.1143/JPSJ.81.024705.S2CID100002412.
- ^Kokado, Satoshi; Tsunoda, Masakiyo (2013). "Anisotropic Magnetoresistance Effect: General Expression of AMR Ratio and Intuitive Explanation for Sign of AMR Ratio".Advanced Materials Research.750–752: 978–982.arXiv:1305.3517.Bibcode:2013arXiv1305.3517K.doi:10.4028/ scientific.net/AMR.750-752.978.S2CID35733115.
- ^Tang, H. X.; Kawakami, R. K.; Awschalom, D. D.; Roukes, M. L. (March 2003),"Giant Planar Hall Effect in Epitaxial (Ga,Mn)As Devices"(PDF),Phys. Rev. Lett.,90(10): 107201,arXiv:cond-mat/0210118,Bibcode:2003PhRvL..90j7201T,doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.90.107201,PMID12689027,S2CID1485882