Short-Wavelength Spin-Wave Generation by a Microstrip Line
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Abstract
IWCE 2015 presentation. We investigate the use of microstrip lines for short-wavelength spin-wave generation in magnetic thin films. We use micromagnetic and electromagnetic simulations to estimate the generated wave amplitudes for different geometries and at different frequencies. Our results suggest that in applications where coherent wavefronts need to be generated a microstrip line might also be used instead of more complicated devices (e.g. spin-torque oscillators) with comparable efficiency.
Bio
I am from Hungary, I received both my B.S. and M.S. degree in Computer Engineering from the Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest, Hungary, where my advisors were Árpád Csurgay and György Csaba. The department had a special focus on bionics and wave computing (e.g. CNN architecture). During my masters my interests drifted towards microelectronics. I got an internship at Notre Dame in the summer of 2012 which was renewed for the spring semester of 2013. I was mostly doing simulations on Nanomagnetic Logic (NML) devices, which was also my thesis topic. This connection led me to the Ph.D. program of Notre Dame, where I continue the work I started earlier.
Credits
In collaboration with György Csaba and Wolfgang Porod. This research was supported by the NSF NEB2020 grant and by a gift from Intel Corporation.
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Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
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Papp, Adam, "Short-Wavelength Spin-Wave Generation by a Microstrip Line," in Computational Electronics (IWCE) 2015 International Workshop on, DOI: 10.1109/IWCE.2015.7301979
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North Ballroom, PMU, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN