RESUMO
Integration of Spin Torque Nano-Oscillators STNO's in conventional microwave circuits means that the devices have to meet certain specifications. One of the most important criteria is the phase noise, being the key parameter to evaluate the performance and define possible applications. Phase locking several oscillators together has been suggested as a possible means to decrease phase noise and consequently, the linewidth. In this work we present experiments, numerical simulations and an analytic model to describe the effects of thermal noise in the injection locking of a tunnel junction based STNO. The analytics show the relation of the intrinsic parameters of the STNO with the phase noise level, opening the path to tailor the spectral characteristics by the magnetic configuration. Experiments and simulations demonstrate that in the in-plane magnetized structure, while the frequency is locked, much higher reference currents are needed to reduce the noise by phase locking. Moreover, our analysis shows that it is possible to control the phase noise by the reference microwave current (IRF) and that it can be further reduced by increasing the bias current (IDC) of the oscillator, keeping the reference current in feasible limits for applications.
RESUMO
Single-shot, time-resolved measurements are presented to investigate the temporal coherence of the microwave emission for MgO based magnetic tunnel junction spin torque oscillators. The time-domain data reveal that the steady state regime obtained from frequency-domain analysis can be subdivided into two regimes as a function of spin polarized current amplitude. According to these two regimes, two mechanisms that limit the temporal coherence are identified. At low current, extinctions of the steady state oscillations lead to a very short coherence time on the order of a few nanoseconds, while at higher current, the extinctions vanish and the coherence time saturates around 40 ns. As an important result it is shown that the latter is limited by frequency fluctuations. Quenching these frequency fluctuations suggests an intrinsic linewidth that is by a factor of 20 below the one of the free running oscillator.
RESUMO
Spintronics materials have recently been considered for radio-frequency devices such as oscillators by exploiting the transfer of spin angular momentum between a spin-polarized electrical current and the magnetic nanostructure it passes through. While previous spin-transfer oscillators (STOs) were based on in-plane magnetized structures, here we present the realization of an STO that contains a perpendicular spin current polarizer combined with an in-plane magnetized free layer. This device is characterized by high-frequency oscillations of the free-layer magnetization, consistent with out-of-plane steady-state precessions induced at the threshold current by a spin-transfer torque from perpendicularly polarized electrons. The results are summarized in static and dynamic current-field state diagrams and will be of importance for the design of STOs with enhanced output signals.