Understanding the Magnetic Microstructure through Experiments and Machine Learning Algorithms

Advanced machine learning techniques have unfurled their applications in various interdisciplinary areas of research and development. This paper highlights the use of image regression algorithms based on advanced neural networks to understand the magnetic properties directly from the magnetic micros...

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Published inACS applied materials & interfaces Vol. 14; no. 44; pp. 50318 - 50330
Main Authors Talapatra, Abhishek, Gajera, Udaykumar, P, Syam Prasad, Arout Chelvane, Jeyaramane, Mohanty, Jyoti Ranjan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 21.10.2022
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Summary:Advanced machine learning techniques have unfurled their applications in various interdisciplinary areas of research and development. This paper highlights the use of image regression algorithms based on advanced neural networks to understand the magnetic properties directly from the magnetic microstructure. In this study, Co/Pd multilayers have been chosen as a reference material system that displays maze-like magnetic domains in pristine conditions. Irradiation of Ar+ ions with two different energies (50 and 100 keV) at various fluences was used as an external perturbation to investigate the modification of magnetic and structural properties from a state of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy to the vicinity of the spin reorientation transition. Magnetic force microscopy revealed domain fragmentation with a smaller periodicity and weaker magnetic contrast up to the fluence of 1014 ions/cm2. Further increases in the ion fluence result in the formation of feather-like domains with a variation in local magnetization distribution. The experimental results were complemented with micromagnetic simulations, where the variations of effective magnetic anisotropy and exchange constant result in qualitatively similar changes in magnetic domains, as observed experimentally. Importantly, a set of 960 simulated domain images was generated to train, validate, and test the convolutional neural network (CNN) that predicts the magnetic properties directly from the domain images with a high level of accuracy (maximum 93.9%). Our work has immense importance in promoting the applications of image regression methods through the CNN in understanding integral magnetic properties obtained from the microscopic features subject to change under external perturbations.
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This paper published online on October 21, 2022, with an error in Figure 5 and several errors within the text. The correct version reposted on October 25, 2022.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.2c12848