2 research outputs found
Nanoscale Magnetic Arrays through Block Copolymer Templating of Polyoxometalates
Magnetic nanoarrays
promise to enable new energy-efficient computations
based on spintronics or magnonics. In this work, we present a block
copolymer-assisted strategy for fabricating ordered magnetic nanostructures
on silicon and permalloy substrates. Block copolymer micelle-like
structures were used as a template in which polyoxometalate (POM)
clusters could assemble in an opal-like structure. A combination of
microscopy and scattering techniques was used to confirm the structural
and organizational features of the fabricated materials. The magnetic
properties of these materials were investigated by polarized neutron
reflectometry, nuclear magnetic resonance, and magnetometry measurements.
The data show that a magnetic structural design was achieved and that
a thin layer of patterned POMs strongly influenced an underlying permalloy
layer. This work demonstrates that the bottom-up pathway is a potentially
viable method for patterning magnetic substrates on a sub-100 nm scale,
toward the magnetic nanostructures needed for spintronic or magnonic
crystal devices
Gigantic Anisotropy of Self-Induced Spin-Orbit Torque in Weyl Ferromagnet Co<sub>2</sub>MnGa
Spin-orbit
torque (SOT) is receiving tremendous attention from
both fundamental and application-oriented aspects. Co2MnGa,
a Weyl ferromagnet that is in a class of topological quantum materials,
possesses cubic-based high structural symmetry, the L21 crystal ordering, which should be incapable of hosting anisotropic
SOT in conventional understanding. Here we show the discovery of a
gigantic anisotropy of self-induced SOT in Co2MnGa. The
magnitude of the SOT is comparable to that of heavy metal/ferromagnet
bilayer systems, despite the high inversion symmetry of the Co2MnGa structure. More surprisingly, a sign inversion of the
self-induced SOT is observed for different crystal axes. This finding
stems from the interplay of the topological nature of the electronic
states and their strong modulation by external strain. Our research
enriches the understanding of the physics of self-induced SOT and
demonstrates a versatile method for tuning SOT efficiencies in a wide
range of materials for topological and spintronic devices
