BESSY II: Insight into ultrafast spin processes with femtoslicing

The scheme shows (from left to right): Hot electrons generated by a laser in platinum (light blue), the copper (yellow) is used to block the laser pulse so that only the hot electrons propagate and transport a spin current through the magnetic spin valve structure of cobalt platinum (blue-brown) and iron gadolinium (green).

The scheme shows (from left to right): Hot electrons generated by a laser in platinum (light blue), the copper (yellow) is used to block the laser pulse so that only the hot electrons propagate and transport a spin current through the magnetic spin valve structure of cobalt platinum (blue-brown) and iron gadolinium (green). © D. Gupta /HZB

An international team has succeeded at BESSY II for the first time to elucidate how ultrafast spin-polarised current pulses can be characterised by measuring the ultrafast demagnetisation in a magnetic layer system within the first hundreds of femtoseconds. The findings are useful for the development of spintronic devices that enable faster and more energy-efficient information processing and storage. The collaboration involved teams from the University of Strasbourg, HZB, Uppsala University and several other universities.

Spintronic components are not based on moving charges, but on changes in the orientation of magnetic moments, such as electron spins. Spin-current-based devices can therefore operate extremely quickly, currently on time scales of up to one hundred picoseconds (one picosecond is 10-12 s). However, the microscopic processes themselves run much faster, in the range of a few hundred femtoseconds (1 fs = 10-15 s).

Magnetic layers form a spin valve

Now, an international team led by Prof. Christine Boeglin, University of Strasbourg, has been able to experimentally observe some of these particularly interesting dynamic processes in a magnetic layer system for the first time. They investigated a so-called spin valve consisting of alternating layers of platinum-cobalt and an iron-gadolinium alloy layer. In this system, interactions between excited (hot) electrons and magnetic layers are particularly strong. First author Deeksha Gupta and her colleagues conducted the experiments at the femtoslicing station at BESSY II together with the HZB team that is operating this worldwide unique infrastructure.

With a femtosecond infrared laser (IR), they generated hot electrons (HE) in a platinum (Pt) top layer. A thick copper layer (Cu, 60 nm) ensures that only HE pulses reach the Co/Pt layer at the front of the spin valve, which acted as a spin polariser, generating spin-polarised HE pulses (SPHE).

Femtoslicing beamline offers unique options

The team was able to characterise these SPHE pulses by analysing the demagnetisation dynamics within the Fe74Gd26 ferrimagnetic layer at the end of the spin valve. To do this, they used methods that are only available in this combination at BESSY II: ‘Thanks to the unique capabilities of the femtoslicing beamline at BESSY II, we can separately probe the ultrafast spin dynamics for each component of a complex sample system,’ says HZB scientist Christian Schüßler-Langeheine. The team used ultrashort (~100 fs) soft X-ray pulses tuned to resonances of iron and gadolinium atoms recorded their respective dynamic reactions to SPHE pulses.

With the help of theoretical models developed by a team led by O. Eriksson at Uppsala University, it was possible to determine the crucial parameters of the SPHE current pulses, in particular the pulse duration, the spin polarisation direction and the current densities required to reproduce the experimental results.

Deeksha Gupta, who carried out the experiments as part of her PhD, has now joined HZB as a postdoctoral researcher, where she will continue to explore magnetic materials. She says: ‘This is a rapidly developing field. For the first time, we have been able to really shed light on the behaviour of spin currents in complex magnetic materials. This could pave the way for faster technological developments.’

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Scrolls from Buddhist shrine virtually unrolled at BESSY II
    Science Highlight
    23.07.2025
    Scrolls from Buddhist shrine virtually unrolled at BESSY II
    The Mongolian collection of the Ethnological Museum of the National Museums in Berlin contains a unique Gungervaa shrine. Among the objects found inside were three tiny scrolls, wrapped in silk. Using 3D X-ray tomography, a team at HZB was able to create a digital copy of one of the scrolls. With a mathematical method the scroll could be virtually unrolled to reveal the scripture on the strip. This method is also used in battery research.
  • Long-term test shows: Efficiency of perovskite cells varies with the season
    Science Highlight
    21.07.2025
    Long-term test shows: Efficiency of perovskite cells varies with the season
    Scientists at HZB run a long-term experiment on the roof of a building at the Adlershof campus. They expose a wide variety of solar cells to the weather conditions, recording their performance over a period of years. These include perovskite solar cells, a new photovoltaic material offering high efficiency and low manufacturing costs. Dr Carolin Ulbrich and Dr Mark Khenkin evaluated four years of data and presented their findings in Advanced Energy Materials. This is the longest series of measurements on perovskite cells in outdoor use to date. The scientists found that standard perovskite solar cells perform very well during the summer months, even over several years, but decline in efficiency during the darker months.
  • Sodium-ion batteries: New storage mechanism for cathode materials
    Science Highlight
    18.07.2025
    Sodium-ion batteries: New storage mechanism for cathode materials
    Li-ion and Na-ion batteries operate through a process called intercalation, where ions are stored and exchanged between two chemically different electrodes. In contrast, co-intercalation, a process in which both ions and solvent molecules are stored simultaneously, has traditionally been considered undesirable due to its tendency to cause rapid battery failure. Against this traditional view, an international research team led by Philipp Adelhelm has now demonstrated that co-intercalation can be a reversible and fast process for cathode materials in Na-ion batteries. The approach of jointly storing ions and solvents in cathode materials provides a new handle for designing batteries with high efficiency and fast charging capabilities. The results are published in Nature Materials.