How Does Resistance Vary in a Ferromagnetic Circuit?

AI Thread Summary
In a ferromagnetic circuit, electrons with spins aligned in different directions create independent currents, resulting in distinct conductivities, σ+ and σ−. The total resistance of the circuit can be derived based on the arrangement of these currents, with the first scenario yielding a resistance formula that accounts for both conductivities in parallel and an external resistor. When an external magnetic field aligns the magnetization of the layers, the resistance changes due to the uniformity of the spin direction, leading to a different resistance expression. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the geometry and configuration of the circuit to accurately calculate resistance. The behavior of the electrons and their spin orientation directly influences the overall conductivity and resistance in the circuit.
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Homework Statement


Electrons in a ferromagnet whose spins are oriented in the direction of, or opposite to, the internal magnetisation carry independent currents I+ and I. This leads to the material behaving as though it has different conductivity σ+ and σ for each of the two current components. These currents may be thought of as flowing through parallel resistances. Two ferromagnetic layers with opposite magnetisation are placed next to each other as shown in the figure.

28m3h8w.png


Each layer has a thickness t and area A. When electrons pass from one layer to the other
their spin-direction remains unchanged. A voltage U is placed across the layers in series
with an external resistor R.

1. Show that the total resistance of the circuit is
R_0 = \frac{t}{2A} (\frac{1}{\sigma_+} + \frac{1}{\sigma_-})+R

2. If an external magnetic field above a certain strength is applied to the system, the two ferromagnetic layers will be magnetised in the same direction. Show that the total resistance is now
R_H = \frac{2t}{A(\sigma_+ + \sigma_-)} +R

Homework Equations


Resistivity
\rho=\frac{1}{\sigma}
Resistance
R=\rho\frac{l}{A}

The Attempt at a Solution


At first I though that the equivalent circuit for the "component" in the middle would be a parallel one with resistances due to σ+ and σ. In this case the equivalent resistance would be

R_{eq} = \frac{t}{A}(\frac{1}{\sigma_+ + \sigma_-})

But this is evidently wrong. Then I thought that each of the two layers has the parallel configuration, and these two layers are in series. In this case the equivalent resistance would be twice the above, which is still wrong.

So it is clear I have the geometry wrong. Can anyone explain the correct geometry?
 
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The metallic part has two indepedent ways where current can flow. One for spin up, and one for spin down. In each part, you have a series of two resistors, corresponding to the left and right side of the metal.
Can you draw this as circuit diagram?
 
Do you mean something like this?

so319t.png
 
Right.

I wonder if that effect was discovered by accident (and explained by QM afterwards), or predicted by QM and measured afterwards.
 
So are resistors on one side of this parallel geometry having the same conductivity?

By the way this is from a comprehensive exam. Sometime we do see "historical question", but the effects are not really named!
 
Pi-Bond said:
So are resistors on one side of this parallel geometry having the same conductivity?
Depends on the interpretation of "side" and the directions of the magnetic field, probably not.

Sometime we do see "historical question", but the effects are not really named!
:(
 
I figured out the answers. For the first part, both branches had the two resistors of either conductivity in series. For the second part, one branch had the two resistors with σ+ in series, while the other had the two resistor with σ- conductivity in series. I'm not sure why this is the case. Obviously it is due to the magnetisation situation. Can you explain how the magnetisation affects the flowing electrons?
 
It is given in the problem statement:
This leads to the material behaving as though it has different conductivity σ+ and σ− for each of the two current components.
[...]
When electrons pass from one layer to the other their spin-direction remains unchanged.
You get one current path with spin-up-electrons (going through both materials) and one current path with spin-down-electrons (going through both materials).
 
But in the first case, one branch of the parallel circuit has two resistors of σ+ and σ- in series.

In the second case one branch has two σ+ resistors in series, while the other has two σ- resistors in series.

Why this change?
 
  • #10
Pi-Bond said:
Why this change?
In the first case, the direction of magnetization is different: electrons seeing σ- in the first material will see σ+ in the second and vice versa.
In the second case, the directions are the same.
 
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