| Literature DB >> 29271208 |
Guoqiang Yu1,2, Alec Jenkins3, Xin Ma4, Seyed Armin Razavi1, Congli He1, Gen Yin1, Qiming Shao1, Qing Lin He1, Hao Wu2, Wenjing Li2, Wanjun Jiang5,6, Xiufeng Han2, Xiaoqin Li4, Ania Claire Bleszynski Jayich3, Pedram Khalili Amiri1, Kang L Wang1.
Abstract
Magnetic skyrmions as swirling spin textures with a nontrivial topology have potential applications as magnetic memory and storage devices. Since the initial discovery of skyrmions in non-centrosymmetric B20 materials, the recent effort has focused on exploring room-temperature skyrmions in heavy metal and ferromagnetic heterostructures, a material platform compatible with existing spintronic manufacturing technology. Here, we report the surprising observation that a room-temperature skyrmion phase can be stabilized in an entirely different class of systems based on antiferromagnetic (AFM) metal and ferromagnetic (FM) metal IrMn/CoFeB heterostructures. There are a number of distinct advantages of exploring skyrmions in such heterostructures including zero-field stabilization, tunable antiferromagnetic order, and sizable spin-orbit torque (SOT) for energy-efficient current manipulation. Through direct spatial imaging of individual skyrmions, quantitative evaluation of the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, and demonstration of current-driven skyrmion motion, our findings firmly establish the AFM/FM heterostructures as a promising material platform for exploring skyrmion physics and device applications.Entities:
Keywords: Skyrmion; antiferromagnet; exchange bias; room temperature; thin films; zero field
Year: 2018 PMID: 29271208 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b04400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189