Static and dynamic magnetic properties of a [Fe(35 Å)/Gd(50 Å)] superlattice are investigated experimentally in the temperature range 5-295 K using SQUID magnetometery and the ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) technique at frequencies 7-38 GHz. The obtained magnetization curves and FMR spectra are analysed theoretically using numerical simulation on the basis of the effective field model. At every given temperature, both static and resonance experimental data can be approximated well within the proposed model. However, a considerable temperature dependence of the effective field parameter in gadolinium layers has to be taken into account to achieve reasonable agreement with the experimental data in the entire temperature range studied. To describe the peculiarities of experimental FMR spectra, a non-local diffusion-type absorption term in Landau-Lifshitz equations is considered in addition to the Gilbert damping term. Possible reasons for the observed effects are discussed.
The effect of temperature and solution components of the chemical catalytic reduction on the composition of Ni-W-B alloy coatings is studied. The x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy in combination with the layer-by-layer profile analysis is used to determine the chemical state of elements and the composition of surface and bulk layers of the coatings containing 28 and 1.8 wt % (10 and 12 at. %) tungsten and boron, respectively. The surface of such coatings is shown to contain up to 90 and 80 at. % reduced nickel and boron, respectively. The deposits have amorphous structure. The effect of thermal treatment conditions on the structure and microhardness of the coatings is investigated. The coatings with a tungsten content of 10 at. % are shown to be nonmagnetic.
The magnetocaloric effect in nanosystems based on exchange-coupled ferromagnets with different Curie temperatures is calculated within the mean-field theory. Good agreement between the results of the mean-field theory and the Landau theory, valid near the critical phase transition temperature, is demonstrated for a flat-layered Fe/Gd/Fe structure. We show that a high magnetic cooling efficiency in this system is attainable in principle and prove the validity of the Maxwell relation, enabling an experimental verification of the predictions made. The theory developed for flat-layered structures is generalized to a granular medium.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.