Dynamics of a ferromagnetic domain wall: Avalanches, depinning transition, and the Barkhausen effect

Stefano Zapperi, Pierre Cizeau, Gianfranco Durin, and H. Eugene Stanley
Phys. Rev. B 58, 6353 – Published 1 September 1998
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Abstract

We study the dynamics of a ferromagnetic domain wall driven by an external magnetic field through a disordered medium. The avalanchelike motion of the domain walls between pinned configurations produces a noise known as the Barkhausen effect. We discuss experimental results on soft ferromagnetic materials, with reference to the domain structure and the sample geometry, and report Barkhausen noise measurements on Fe21Co64B15 amorphous alloy. We construct an equation of motion for a flexible domain wall, which displays a depinning transition as the field is increased. The long-range dipolar interactions are shown to set the upper critical dimension to dc=3, which implies that mean-field exponents (with possible logarithmic correction) are expected to describe the Barkhausen effect. We introduce a mean-field infinite-range model and show that it is equivalent to a previously introduced single-degree-of-freedom model, known to reproduce several experimental results. We numerically simulate the equation in d=3, confirming the theoretical predictions. We compute the avalanche distributions as a function of the field driving rate and the intensity of the demagnetizing field. The scaling exponents change linearly with the driving rate, while the cutoff of the distribution is determined by the demagnetizing field, in remarkable agreement with experiments.

  • Received 19 March 1998

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.58.6353

©1998 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Stefano Zapperi* and Pierre Cizeau

  • Center for Polymer Studies and Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215

Gianfranco Durin

  • Istituto Elettrotecnico Nazionale Galileo Ferraris and INFM, Corso M. d’Azeglio 42, I-10125 Torino, Italy

H. Eugene Stanley

  • Center for Polymer Studies and Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215

  • *Present address: PMMH ESPCI, 10 rue Vauquelin, 75231 Paris-Cedex 05, France.
  • Present address: Science & Finance, 109-111 rue Victor Hugo, 92523 Levallois-Cedex, France.

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Vol. 58, Iss. 10 — 1 September 1998

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