Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1803238 Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

A series of 20 and 100 nm Fe53Pt47 thin films sputter-deposited onto Si substrates have been thermally annealed using a pulsed thermal plasma arc lamp. A series of one, three or five pulses were applied to the thin films with widths of either 50 or 100 ms. The microstructure and magnetic properties of these annealed Fe53Pt47 films are discussed according to the various annealing conditions and A1 to L10 phase transformation. Upon pulse annealing, the average in-plane grain size of 15 nm (nearly equivalent for both film thicknesses) was observed to increase to values near 20 nm. In general, increasing the pulse width or number of pulses increased the L10 order parameter, tetragonality of the c/a ratio and coercivity of the specimen. The exception to this trend was for five pulses at 100 ms for both film thicknesses, which indicated a reduction of the order parameter and coercivity. This reduction is believed to be a result of the interdiffusion of Fe and Pt into the Si substrate and the formation of iron oxide clusters in the grain boundaries characterized by atom probe tomography.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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