Synthetic antiferromagnetic layer, magnetic tunnel junction and spintronic device using said synthetic antiferromagnetic layer
10658574 · 2020-05-19
Assignee
- Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Et Aux Energies Alternatives (Paris, FR)
- Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique (Cnrs) (Paris, FR)
- Universite Grenoble Alpes (Saint Martin d'Heres, FR)
Inventors
- Jyotirmoy Chatterjee (West Bengal, IN)
- Bernard DIENY (Lans En Vercors, FR)
- Ricardo Sousa (Grenoble, FR)
- Stéphane Auffret (Vaulnaveys le Haut, FR)
Cpc classification
H10B61/00
ELECTRICITY
H01F10/3236
ELECTRICITY
H01F10/3272
ELECTRICITY
G11C11/161
PHYSICS
G11C11/16
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A synthetic antiferromagnetic layer includes a first ferromagnetic layer containing an amorphizing element, the first ferromagnetic layer having a first structural symmetry; a second ferromagnetic layer having a second structural symmetry; wherein the first and the second ferromagnetic layers are antiferromagnetically coupled by a trifunctional non-magnetic multi-layered structure, the antiferromagnetic coupling being an Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) coupling, the non-magnetic multi-layered structure including at least two non-magnetic layers, the non-magnetic multilayered structure being at least partially nano-crystalline or amorphous in order to ensure a structural transition between the first ferromagnetic layer having the first structural symmetry and the second ferromagnetic layer having the second structural symmetry, the non-magnetic multilayered structure being adapted to absorb at least part of the amorphizing element out of the first ferromagnetic layer in contact with the non-magnetic multi-layered structure.
Claims
1. A synthetic antiferromagnetic layer comprising: a first ferromagnetic layer containing an amorphizing element, said first ferromagnetic layer having a first structural symmetry; a second ferromagnetic layer having a second structural symmetry; wherein the first and the second ferromagnetic layers are antiferromagnetically coupled by a trifunctional non-magnetic multi-layered structure, the antiferromagnetic coupling being an Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) coupling, said non-magnetic multi-layered structure comprising at least two non-magnetic layers, said non-magnetic multilayered structure being at least partially nano-crystalline or amorphous in order to ensure a structural transition between the first ferromagnetic layer having the first structural symmetry and the second ferromagnetic layer having the second structural symmetry, said non-magnetic multilayered structure being adapted to absorb at least part of the amorphizing element out of the first ferromagnetic layer in contact with the non-magnetic multi-layered structure.
2. The synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 1, wherein the non-magnetic multilayered structure comprises at least a first and a second non-magnetic layer, the first non-magnetic layer comprising one of the following elements Ru, Re, Rh, Cu, Ir, Os or an alloy thereof and/or the second non-magnetic layer comprising one of the following elements W, Mo, Nb, Cu, Ta, V, Cr or an alloy thereof.
3. The synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 1, wherein a thickness of the first non-magnetic layer is lower than 2 nm.
4. The synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 3, wherein the thickness of the first non-magnetic layer is comprised between 0.2 nm and 0.9 nm.
5. The synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 1, wherein a thickness of the second non-magnetic layer is lower than 1 nm.
6. The synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 5, wherein the thickness of the second non-magnetic layer is comprised between 0.1 nm and 0.6 nm.
7. The synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 1, wherein the non-magnetic multi-layered structure comprises n bilayers, each bilayer comprising a first and a second non-magnetic layers.
8. A magnetic tunnel junction comprising the synthetic antiferromagnetic layer according to claim 1, a first tunnel barrier layer, a storage layer and a cap layer and/or a second tunnel barrier layer added in contact with the storage layer on its interface opposite to the first tunnel barrier layer.
9. The magnetic tunnel junction according to claim 8, wherein the first and second tunnel barrier layers are MgO layers.
10. The magnetic tunnel junction according to claim 8, wherein the storage layer is a composite storage layer, said composite storage layer comprising a stack formed by at least a first ferromagnetic layer, a non-magnetic layer or multilayer and a second ferromagnetic layer, said first and second ferromagnetic layers comprising at least one of the following alloys CoFeB, FeB, CoFe and the non-magnetic layer or multilayer being adapted to absorb the amorphizing element and comprising at least one of the following elements Ta, W, Mo, Ru or an alloy thereof.
11. The magnetic tunnel junction according to claim 8, comprising an additional magnetic layer added in contact with the second tunnel barrier layer and/or an additional synthetic antiferromagnetic layer in contact with the second tunnel barrier layer.
12. The magnetic tunnel junction according to claim 11, wherein the additional synthetic antiferromagnetic layer comprises an additional trifunctional non-magnetic multi-layered structure.
13. The magnetic tunnel junction according to claim 11, wherein the storage layer is formed by a synthetic antiferromagnetic layer.
14. A spintronic device comprising a synthetic antiferromagnetic layer SAF according to claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) Other characteristics and benefits of the invention will be evident from the description thereof that is provided in the following, purely for non-limiting, exemplary purposes, with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11)
(12)
(13) The magnetic stack shown in
(14) In the case where the layers constituting the synthetic antiferromagnetic layer SAF are magnetized out-of-plane, the structure is called a perpendicular synthetic antiferromagnet pSAF.
(15) The first ferromagnetic layer PL can act as a polarizer or reference layer. In the example of
(16) In the case of out-of-plane magnetized MTJs, the hard layer HL comprises n bilayers of A/X nano-laminates which have intrinsic perpendicular magnetic anisotropy PMA originated from A/X interfaces via electron hybridization effect or interfacial strain. The material for A can be made of Co, Fe, CoFe, CoFeB or an alloy thereof, and X is Pt, Au, Ir, Pd, Ni, NiCo, NiFe or NiFeCo based alloys. Similar PMA can be obtained if A and X are interchanged to form X/A nano-laminates.
(17) Still in the case of out-of-plane magnetized MTJs, the hard layer HL may also be a material exhibiting bulk PMA, for example L1.sub.0 ordered alloy of FePt, FePd and CoPt; L1.sub.1 ordered alloy CoPt, CoPd, CoNiPt. It may also be an alloy of rare earth-transition metals in the form of RE-TM where RE stands for Tb, Dy, Er, Gd or an alloy thereof, and TM stands for Fe, Co or an alloy thereof. It can also be a Heusler alloy with perpendicular anisotropy such as Mn2.7Co0.3Ga.
(18) In the case of in-plane magnetized MTJs, as well-known by the man skilled in the art, the hard layer HL is, for example, an exchange biased layer i.e. a ferromagnetic layer essentially made of a CoFe alloy 1.5 to 3 nm thick which is exchange coupled to an antiferromagnetic layer most often made of IrMn typically between 5 nm and 8 nm thick or PtMn typically 10 nm to 20 nm thick.
(19) These hard layers HL are actually similar to those used in the prior art.
(20) The trifunctional coupling layer TriAF of the synthetic antiferromagnetic layer SAF according to an embodiment of the invention ensures three functions: the first is to provide antiferromagnetic coupling between the hard layer HL and the reference layer PL. The second function is to ensure a structural transition between two layers of different structural symmetry for instance here the fcc structure of the hard layer HL and the bcc structure of the reference or polarizer layer PL. The third function is absorption of boron from CoFeB polarizer layer PL upon annealing.
(21) The HL and the polarizer layer PL are antiferromagnetically coupled by the trifunctional anti-ferromagnetic TriAF coupling layer. According to an embodiment the TriAF coupling layer consists of a C/T bilayer where C is one of Ru, Re, Rh, Ir, Cu and Os or an alloy thereof. The thickness of this C layer is adjusted in the range 0.2 nm-0.9 nm together with that of the T layer to provide a strong RKKY interaction between HL and PL through the C/T composite layer. T can be one of W, Mo, Nb, V, Ta, Cr or an alloy thereof, which functions as a symmetry breaking layer allowing the structural transition from the HL layer.
(22) This is particularly useful because the hard layer HL and the polarizer layer have usually different crystal structures. For example, the hard layer HL can have a fcc crystal structure as for Co/Pt type multilayers or exchange biased IrMn/CoFe bilayers, or tetragonal as with FePt L1.sub.0. The polarizer layer PL can have a bcc (001) crystal structure like CoFeB.
(23) The T layer can also act as inter-diffusion barrier between the C layer and the PL layer and/or as a partial B getter layer. The thickness of the T layer is also adjusted in the range (0.1-0.6 nm) together with that of the C layer to provide strong antiferromagnetic coupling between HL and PL through the C/T composite layer. The TriAF coupling layer can be a multilayer formed with (C/T)n configuration with T on top. This means that the TriAF layer is formed by n bilayers of C/T bilayers. Since the C/T bilayers play the three functions of coupling, symmetry breaking and B absorption, this stack of layers acts as a trifunctional anti-ferromagnetic coupling layer (TriAF).
(24) The tunnel barrier can be one of MgO, AlOx, TaOx, TiO2, HfOx, ZrOx, GaOx, SrTiO3 or other metal oxide on top of pSAF layer which generate interface perpendicular magnetic anisotropy with PL and SL and provides large TMR amplitude.
(25)
(26) The SAF/MgO/cap measured sample has the composition Pt/(Co/Pt)3/Co/Ru 4 /W 2 /CoFeB 10 /MgO/Cap and was annealed at 340 C. The M-H loop was measured by vibrating sample magnetometer VSM. Along this descending branch of hysteresis loop, the field is decreased from the positive saturation to the negative saturation. Three magnetization reversal steps are observed while decreasing the field from positive to negative saturation as described below. All the magnetization reversal steps with the sweeping of magnetic field are sharp with high squareness. This signifies that the SAF layer has perpendicular anisotropy. Coming from high saturation positive field, the first reversal around 4280 Oe is the characteristic field H.sub.0+ at which the RKKY coupling energy gain associated with bringing the HL and the polarizing 10 CoFeB layer PL magnetizations in antiparallel alignment balances the cost in Zeeman energy associated with reversing the PL magnetization in the direction opposite to the applied field. Below this characteristic field, the magnetic moments across the TriAF coupling layers are aligned antiparallel. When the field is reversed and increased negatively, another characteristic field around 1000 Oe corresponds to the simultaneous reversal of both PL and HL magnetization. This characteristic field can be viewed as the coercive field of the net moment formed by the PL and HL antiferromagnetically coupled sandwich. Finally, at H.sub.0=4450 Oe, the Zeeman energy exceeds the RKKY coupling energy so that the two magnetic moments again switch to parallel configuration. Both HL's and PL's moments are then completely saturated along the negative field direction. In macrospin approximation the field H.sub.0+ and H.sub.0 would be expected to be identical in absolute value. However, in reality, they slightly differ (4280 Oe vs 4450 Oe) because the switching process is different in the two transitions.
(27) At 4280 Oe, the switching of the CoFeB layer at 4280 Oe is driven by the RKKY antiferromagnetic coupling against the applied field whereas the switching at 4450 Oe is driven by the applied field against the antiferromagnetic RKKY coupling. A characteristic field Ho can then be defined as (H.sub.0+H.sub.0)/2 called inter-layer exchange coupling field or RKKY coupling field. It is equal here to 4365 Oe.
(28) The RKKY coupling energy (J.sub.RKKY) has been calculated by using the equation below,
J.sub.RKKY=H.sub.oM.sub.st
where M.sub.s and t are the saturation magnetization and thickness of the CoFeB PL. The coupling energy depends on the thickness of C and T of the TriAF coupling layer.
(29)
(30) In particular,
(31) Depending on the thickness of the TriAF coupling layer, the coupling energy can be tuned over a broad range. For all W thicknesses, the peak in coupling energy appears with Ru thickness in the range of 0.4 to 0.45 nm which is the thickness region for the first peak of the oscillatory curve of RKKY coupling energy.
(32) Using the synthetic antiferromagnetic layer SAF with the non-magnetic multilayered structure TriAF, the MTJ stack (either in-plane or out-of-plane magnetized) can be configured as top free or bottom free layer configuration as shown for example in
(33) The top free layer configuration of the magnetic tunnel junction MTJ of
(34) The pSAF according to an embodiment of the invention showed in
(35) In top free layer configuration showed in
(36) In particular the bottom free layer configuration of the magnetic tunnel junction MTJ of
(37) The pSAF according to an embodiment of the invention shown in
(38) This configuration with bottom storage layer SL is in particular adapted for SOT-MRAM since the free layer SL has to be in contact with a horizontal conducting line having high spin orbit constant. As known by the man skilled in the art, the MgO tunnel barrier can be prepared by RF deposition of MgO from an MgO target or by natural oxidation of a metallic Mg layer. The free layer SL can be made of CoFeB alloy or be a composite layer consisting of a stack of several layers of different (Co1xFex)1yBy compositions (x between 0 and 1 and y between 0 and 0.3). In perpendicular MTJ, as known by the man skilled in the art, provided this layer is thin enough (1.6 nm), its magnetization is pulled out-of-plane by the interfacial anisotropy which exists at the interface between the storage layer and the MgO barrier. But other materials exhibiting perpendicular anisotropy and low Gilbert damping (0.02) could be used as storage layer or free layer SL in particular among the Heusler alloys.
(39) In
(40) In the bottom free layer configuration (
(41) Similar stacks with bottom free or top free layer can be considered with in-plane magnetized materials. In this case, the HL is an exchange biased layer as previously described and the storage layer SL is chosen with in-plane magnetization. This can be achieved by using also CoFeB layer but with a larger thickness than in the perpendicular anisotropy case so that the easy-plane demagnetizing energy exceeds the interfacial perpendicular MgO/CoFeB anisotropy resulting in an in-plane magnetization of the layer.
(42)
(43) The magnetic tunnel junction MTJ of
(44) The pSAF layer of
(45) The composite storage layer (CSL) of
(46) The magnetic tunnel junction of
(47) The pSAF layer of
(48) A peculiarity of these stacks is that they also comprise a second MgO layer added in contact with the composite storage layer CSL on its interface opposite to the first MgO tunnel barrier. This type of stacks is especially interesting in the case of out-of-plane magnetized MTJs since the second MgO layer allows to further increase the perpendicular anisotropy of the composite storage layer CSL. This increases the thermal stability factor of the composite storage layer CSL and therefore retention of memory devices. This also allows to increase the CSL thickness (typically from 1.3 nm to 3 nm) resulting in an enhanced TMR amplitude. It is also interesting in the case of in-plane magnetized MTJ to reduce the effective demagnetizing field thanks to the doubled interfacial anisotropy at storage layer SL/MgO interfaces which thereby reduces the switching current. In these stacks where the storage layer is sandwiched between two MgO layers, it is then a composite storage layer CSL of composition of the form FM/NM/FM. The ferromagnetic FM layer can be comprised of CoFeB, FeB, CoFe, Fe or combination. NM is generally a non-magnetic layer. The NM layer is intended to absorb the B away from the MgO interfaces. NM can be made of B absorbing materials such as Ta, W, Ru, Mo, or an alloy or MLs thereof. It may also comprise some magnetic elements such as Co and Fe to increase the magnetic coupling across it. In that case, NM may be slightly magnetic. This layer is thick enough to be able to absorb a sufficient amount of B from the adjacent CoFeB layers but is thin enough to still ensure a good magnetic coupling (ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic depending on its thickness) between the two magnetic layers on both sides of it. Its thickness is typically in the range 0.2 nm to 1 nm. Alternatively, as about the stacks described in
(49) The cap layer Cap above the 2nd MgO layer in the stack of
(50) As an example, a top free perpendicular MTJ stack as described in
(51) The measured hysteresis loop is shown in
(52)
(53) The stack of
(54) The bottom SAF of
(55) The top SAF of
(56) In contrast to the stacks described in
(57) The storage layer CSL is composite and consists of a ferromagnetic/non-magnetic/ferromagnetic or FM/NM/FM sandwich where the magnetizations of the two ferromagnetic layers are ferromagnetically coupled though the non-magnetic spacer (the latter can be made of Ta, W, Mo typically 0.1 to 1 nm thick). When the storage layer is a composite ferromagnetic layer CSL as described here, the magnetization of the CoFeB polarizer layer and of the 2nd polarizer layer is set in antiparallel alignment to obtain the maximum STT efficiency. As well known by the man skilled in the art, setting these magnetizations in antiparallel alignment can be achieved by performing minor hysteresis loops taking advantage of the difference of coercivity of the two polarizer layers.
(58) In this embodiment, as known by the man skilled in the art, the two MgO barriers have different resistance x area RA products since the changes of resistance associated with CSL magnetization switching from the bottom MgO barrier and from the top MgO barrier are opposite in sign. Indeed, when there is parallel magnetic alignment across one barrier, the other is in antiparallel alignment and vice versa. Since these two tunnel barriers can be considered as connected in series, using MgO barriers of different RA allows not to reduce excessively the net tunnel magnetoresistance of the stack. Typically, a difference of RA product by at least a factor 3 is desirable.
(59)
(60) The stack of
(61) The bottom SAF of
(62) The top SAF of
(63) Here the storage layer SAF SL, instead of being made of a composite ferromagnetic layer, is made of a synthetic antiferromagnetic layer SAF of the form ferromagnetic/non-magnetic/ferromagnetic in which the two ferromagnetic layers are antiferromagnetically coupled through the non-magnetic layer. The later can be made for instance of TriAF, Ta, W, Mo or Ru with thickness chosen so as to get antiferromagnetic coupling.
(64) As well known by the man skilled in the art, when such SAF SL storage layer is used, the polarizer layer PL and the additional polarizing layer APL are then set in parallel magnetic configuration to get the maximum spin transfer efficiency.
(65) Another object of the invention is a spintronic device comprising a synthetic antiferromagnetic SAF layer comprising a trifunctional layer TriAF according to the invention.
(66) Such a device can be for example a Spin Transfer Torque Magnetic Random Access Memory STT-MRAM, a Spin Orbit Transfer Magnetic Random Access Memory SOT-MRAM, a Spin transfer oscillator, a spin-diode, a memristor or a magnetoresistive sensor.
(67) For example, the magnetic tunnel junction of
(68) The magnetic tunnel junctions described in