Abstract
We have observed magnetic and electrical transport properties in giant magnetoresistive inhomogeneous cobalt-silver films. The material consists of two distinct magnetic phases: large clusters which dominate the magnetization and magnetoresistive processes at room temperature, between which cooperative behavior is observed; and small clusters which dominate the magnetization below 10 K, but make only a minor contribution to the magnetoresistance. Both the variation of the magnetoresistance with magnetization in the film and the difference in the magnetoresistance between the zero-field-cooled and field-cycled state are interpreted by invoking interactions between the active magnetic regions in the sample.
- Received 24 May 1993
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.49.1064
©1994 American Physical Society