| Literature DB >> 32743868 |
Jingyan Zhang1, Ying Zhang2, Yang Gao2, Guoping Zhao3, Lei Qiu3, Kaiyou Wang4, Pengwei Dou1, Wenlin Peng1, Yuan Zhuang1, Yanfei Wu1, Guoqiang Yu2, Zhaozhao Zhu2, Yunchi Zhao2, Yaqin Guo2, Tao Zhu2, Jianwang Cai2, Baogen Shen2, Shouguo Wang1.
Abstract
Magnetic skyrmions are attracting interest as efficient information-storage devices with low energy consumption, and have been experimentally and theoretically investigated in multilayers including ferromagnets, ferrimagnets, and antiferromagnets. The 3D spin texture of skyrmions demonstrated in ferromagnetic multilayers provides a powerful pathway for understanding the stabilization of ferromagnetic skyrmions. However, the manipulation mechanism of skyrmions in antiferromagnets is still lacking. A Hall balance with a ferromagnet/insulating spacer/ferromagnet structure is considered to be a promising candidate to study skyrmions in synthetic antiferromagnets. Here, high-density Néel-type skyrmions are experimentally observed at zero field and room temperature by Lorentz transmission electron microscopy in a Hall balance (core structure [Co/Pt]n /NiO/[Co/Pt]n ) with interfacial canted magnetizations because of interlayer ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic coupling between top and bottom [Co/Pt]n multilayers, where the Co layers in [Co/Pt]n are always ferromagnetically coupled. Micromagnetic simulations show that the generation and density of skyrmions are strongly dependent on interlayer exchange coupling (IEC) and easy-axis orientation. Direct experimental evidence of skyrmions in synthetic antiferromagnets is provided, suggesting that the proposed approach offers a promising alternative mechanism for room-temperature spintronics.Entities:
Keywords: interfacial canted magnetizations; interlayer exchange coupling; skyrmions; synthetic antiferromagnets
Year: 2020 PMID: 32743868 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201907452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849