Physical Review Research (Feb 2020)

Observation of the dominant spin-triplet supercurrent in Josephson spin valves with strong Ni ferromagnets

  • O. M. Kapran,
  • A. Iovan,
  • T. Golod,
  • V. M. Krasnov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.013167
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 013167

Abstract

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We study experimentally nanoscale Josephson junctions and Josephson spin valves containing strongly ferromagnetic Ni interlayers. We observe that in contrast to junctions, spin valves with the same geometry exhibit anomalous I_{c}(H) patterns with two peaks separated by a dip. We develop several techniques for in situ characterization of micromagnetic states in our nanodevices, including magnetoresistance, absolute Josephson fluxometry, and first-order-reversal-curves analysis. They reveal a clear correlation of the dip in supercurrent with the antiparallel state of a spin valve and the peaks with two noncollinear magnetic states, thus providing evidence for generation of spin-triplet superconductivity. A quantitative analysis, based on micromagnetic simulations, brings us to the conclusion that the triplet current in our Ni-based spin valves is approximately three times larger than the conventional spin-singlet supercurrent.