Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5358590 | Applied Surface Science | 2015 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
We investigate the origin of ferromagnetism induced in thin-film (â¼20Â nm) Fe-V alloys by their irradiation with subpicosecond laser pulses. We find with Rutherford backscattering that the magnetic modifications follow a thermally stimulated process of diffusion decomposition, with formation of a-few-nm-thick Fe enriched layer inside the film. Surprisingly, similar transformations in the samples were also found after their long-time (â¼103Â s) thermal annealing. However, the laser action provides much higher diffusion coefficients (â¼4 orders of magnitude) than those obtained under standard heat treatments. We get a hint that this ultrafast diffusion decomposition occurs in the metallic glassy state achievable in laser-quenched samples. This vitrification is thought to be a prerequisite for the laser-induced onset of ferromagnetism that we observe.
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Authors
N.I. Polushkin, A.C. Duarte, O. Conde, E. Alves, N.P. Barradas, A. GarcÃa-GarcÃa, G.N. Kakazei, J.O. Ventura, J.P. Araujo, V. Oliveira, R. Vilar,