| Literature DB >> 29957931 |
Junxiang Yao1, Xiao Song1, Xingsen Gao1, Guo Tian1, Peilian Li1, Hua Fan1, Zhifeng Huang1, Wenda Yang1, Deyang Chen1, Zhen Fan1, Min Zeng1, Jun-Ming Liu2.
Abstract
Electrically driven magnetic switching (EDMS) is highly demanded for next-generation advanced memories or spintronic devices. The key challenge is to achieve repeatable and reversible EDMS at sufficiently small scale. In this work, we reported an experimental realization of room-temperature, electrically driven, reversible, and robust 120° magnetic state rotation in nanoscale multiferroic heterostructures consisting of a triangular Co nanomagnet array on tetragonal BiFeO3 films, which can be directly monitored by magnetic force microscope (MFM) imaging. The observed reversible magnetic switching in an individual nanomagnet can be triggered by a small electric pulse within 10 V with an ultrashort time of ∼10 ns, which also demonstrates sufficient switching cycling and months-long retention lifetime. A mechanism based on synergic effects of interfacial strain and exchange coupling plus shape anisotropy was also proposed, which was also verified by micromagnetic simulations. Our results create an avenue to engineer the nanoscale EDMS for low-power-consumption, high-density, nonvolatile magnetoelectric memories and beyond.Entities:
Keywords: electric-driven magnetic switching; magnetic random access memory; magnetoelectric; multiferroic heterostructures; nanomagnets
Year: 2018 PMID: 29957931 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b01936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881