Strongly-interacting nanomagnetic arrays are ideal systems for exploring reconfigurable magnonics. They provide huge microstate spaces and integrated solutions for storage and neuromorphic computing alongside GHz functionality. These systems may be broadly assessed by their range of reliably accessible states and the strength of magnon coupling phenomena and nonlinearities. Increasingly, nanomagnetic systems are expanding into three-dimensional architectures. This has enhanced the range of available magnetic microstates and functional behaviours, but engineering control over 3D states and dynamics remains challenging. Here, we introduce a 3D magnonic metamaterial composed from multilayered artificial spin ice nanoarrays. Comprising two magnetic layers separated by a non-magnetic spacer, each nanoisland may assume four macrospin or vortex states per magnetic layer. This creates a system with a rich 16Nmicrostate space and intense static and dynamic dipolar magnetic coupling. The system exhibits a broad range of emergent phenomena driven by the strong inter-layer dipolar interaction, including ultrastrong magnon-magnon coupling with normalised coupling rates of$$\frac{\Delta f}{\nu }=0.57$$ , GHz mode shifts in zero applied field and chirality-control of magnetic vortex microstates with corresponding magnonic spectra.
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Numerical simulation of split ring resonator near-fields and antiferromagnetic magnon hybridization
We report on the results of finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations of the terahertz response of a split ring resonator (SRR) metamaterial coupled to a hypothetical antiferromagnetic material (AFM) characterized by a magnon resonance. We find a hybridization of the SRR’s local magnetic field and the magnon, which manifests as an avoided crossing in the far-field transmission spectrum. We show that the strong light-matter coupling can be modelled via a two coupled oscillator model. We further evaluate the SRR-AFM coupling strength by varying the physical separation with a dielectric spacer between them. We find strong coupling for spacers thinner than 3μm, suggesting far-field transmission measurements of metamaterial near-fields to be a versatile platform to investigate magnetic excitations of quantum materials.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2011876
- PAR ID:
- 10490509
- Publisher / Repository:
- Optical Society of America
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Optical Materials Express
- Volume:
- 14
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 2159-3930
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: Article No. 687
- Size(s):
- Article No. 687
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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