| Literature DB >> 30368960 |
Ivan Lemesh1, Kai Litzius2,3,4, Marie Böttcher2, Pedram Bassirian2, Nico Kerber2, Daniel Heinze2, Jakub Zázvorka2, Felix Büttner1, Lucas Caretta1, Maxwell Mann1, Markus Weigand4, Simone Finizio5, Jörg Raabe5, Mi-Young Im6,7,8, Hermann Stoll4, Gisela Schütz4, Bertrand Dupé2, Mathias Kläui2,3, Geoffrey S D Beach1.
Abstract
Magnetic skyrmions promise breakthroughs in future memory and computing devices due to their inherent stability and small size. Their creation and current driven motion have been recently observed at room temperature, but the key mechanisms of their formation are not yet well-understood. Here it is shown that in heavy metal/ferromagnet heterostructures, pulsed currents can drive morphological transitions between labyrinth-like, stripe-like, and skyrmionic states. Using high-resolution X-ray microscopy, the spin texture evolution with temperature and magnetic field is imaged and it is demonstrated that with transient Joule heating, topological charges can be injected into the system, driving it across the stripe-skyrmion boundary. The observations are explained through atomistic spin dynamic and micromagnetic simulations that reveal a crossover to a global skyrmionic ground state above a threshold magnetic field, which is found to decrease with increasing temperature. It is demonstrated how by tuning the phase stability, one can reliably generate skyrmions by short current pulses and stabilize them at zero field, providing new means to create and manipulate spin textures in engineered chiral ferromagnets.Keywords: Dzyaloshinkii-Moriya interaction; magnetic domains; multilayers; perpendicular magnetic anisotropy; skyrmions
Year: 2018 PMID: 30368960 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201805461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849