Published Online: 20 April 2016
Accepted: April 2016
Journal of Applied Physics 119, 153903 (2016); https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4947119
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  • San Jose Research Center, HGST, a Western Digital Company, 3403 Yerba Buena Road, San Jose, California 95135, USA
  • a)Internship student from Department of Physics, Ohio State University.

    b)Current address: National Institute for Materials Science, 1-2-1 Sengen, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0047, Japan. Email: .

The properties of Co2(Mn1−xFex)Ge (CMFG) (x = 0–0.4) Heusler alloy magnetic layers within polycrystalline current-perpendicular-to-the plane giant magnetoresistance (CPP-GMR) spin-valves are investigated. CMFG films annealed at 220–320 °C exhibit partly ordered B2 structure with an order parameter SB2 = 0.3–0.4, and a lower SB2 was found for a higher Fe content. Nevertheless, CPP-GMR spin-valve devices exhibit a relatively high magnetoresistance ratio of ∼13% and a magnetoresistance-area product (ΔRA) of ∼6 mΩ μm2 at room temperature, which is almost independent of the Fe content in the CMFG films. By contrast, at low temperatures, ΔRA clearly increases with higher Fe content, despite the lower B2 ordering for increasing the Fe content. Indeed, first-principles calculations reveal that the CMFG alloy with a partially disordered B2 structure has a greater density of d-state at the Fermi level in the minority band compared to the Fe-free (Co2MnGe) alloy. This could explain the larger ΔRA measured on CMFG at low temperatures by assuming that s-d scattering mainly determines the spin asymmetry of resistivity as described in Mott's theory.
We thank Henrik Zadoori of HGST Materials Laboratory for XRF analysis. M.R.P. acknowledges partial support from the Center for Emergent Materials: an NSF MRSEC under award number DMR-1420451.
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