62 research outputs found
Topological, non topological and instanton droplets driven by spin-transfer torque in materials with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya Interaction
The interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya Interaction can modify the topology of
droplets excited by a localized spin-polarized current. Here, we show that, in
addition to the stationary droplet excitations with skyrmion number either one
(topological) or zero (non-topological), there exists, for a fixed current, an
excited mode with a non-stationary time behavior. We call this mode "instanton
droplet", which is characterized by time domain transitions of the skyrmion
number. These transitions are coupled to an emission of incoherent spin-waves
that can be observed in the frequency domain as a source of noise. Our results
are interesting from a fundamental point of view to study spin-wave emissions
due to a topological transition in current-driven systems, and could open the
route for experiments based on magnetoresistance effect for the design of a
further generation of nanoscale microwave oscillators
Ultra-sensitive voltage-controlled skyrmion-based spintronic diode
We have designed a passive spintronic diode based on a single skyrmion
stabilized in a magnetic tunnel junction and studied its dynamics induced by
voltage-controlled anisotropy (VCMA) and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction
(VDMI). We have demonstrated that the sensitivity (rectified voltage over input
microwave power) with realistic physical parameters and geometry can be larger
than 10 kV/W which is one order of magnitude better than diodes employing a
uniform ferromagnetic state. Our numerical and analytical results on the VCMA
and VDMI-driven resonant excitation of skyrmions beyond the linear regime
reveal a frequency dependence on the amplitude and no efficient parametric
resonance. Skyrmions with a smaller radius produced higher sensitivities,
demonstrating the efficient scalability of skyrmion-based spintronic diodes.
These results pave the way for designing passive ultra-sensitive and energy
efficient skyrmion-based microwave detectors.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Electrical detection of single magnetic skyrmion at room temperature
This paper proposes a protocol for the electrical detection of a magnetic skyrmion via the change of the tunneling magnetoresistive (TMR) signal in a three-terminal device. This approach combines alternating spin-transfer torque from both spin-filtering (due to a perpendicular polarizer) and spin-Hall effect with the TMR signal. Micromagnetic simulations, used to test and verify such working principle, show that there exists a frequency region particularly suitable for this achievement. This result can be at the basis of the design of a TMR based read-out for skyrmion detection, overcoming the difficulties introduced by the thermal drift of the skyrmion once nucleated
Skyrmions in nanorings: a versatile platform for Skyrmionics
The dynamical properties of skyrmions can be exploited to build devices with
new functionalities. Here, we first investigate a skyrmion-based ring-shaped
device by means of micromagnetic simulations and Thiele equation. We
subsequently show three applications scenarios: (1) a clock with tunable
frequency that is biased with an electrical current having a radial spatial
distribution, (2) an alternator, where the skyrmion circular motion driven by
an engineered anisotropy gradient is converted into an electrical signal, and
(3) an energy harvester, where the skyrmion motion driven by a thermal gradient
is converted into an electrical signal, thus providing a heat recovery
operation. We also show how to precisely tune the frequency and amplitude of
the output electrical signals by varying material parameters, geometrical
parameters, number and velocity of skyrmions, and we further prove the correct
device functionality under realistic conditions given by room temperature and
internal material defects. Our results open a new route for the realization of
energy efficient nanoscale clocks, generators, and energy harvesters
Current-driven domain wall dynamics in ferromagnetic layers synthetically exchange-coupled by a spacer: A micromagnetic study
[EN] The current-driven domain wall motion along two exchange-coupled ferromagnetic layers with perpendicular anisotropy is studied by means of micromagnetic simulations and compared to the conventional case of a single ferromagnetic layer. Our results, where only the lower ferromagnetic layer is subjected to the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction and to the spin Hall effect, indicate that the domain walls can be synchronously driven in the presence of a strong interlayer exchange coupling, and that the velocity is significantly enhanced due to the antiferromagnetic exchange coupling as compared with the single-layer case. On the contrary, when the coupling is of ferromagnetic nature, the velocity is reduced. We provide a full micromagnetic characterization of the current-driven motion in these multilayers, both in the absence and in the presence of longitudinal fields, and the results are explained based on a one-dimensional model. The interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, only necessary in this lower layer, gives the required chirality to the magnetization textures, while the interlayer exchange coupling favors the synchronous movement of the coupled walls by a dragging mechanism, without significant tilting of the domain wall plane. Finally, the domain wall dynamics along curved strips is also evaluated. These results indicate that the antiferromagnetic coupling between the ferromagnetic layers mitigates the tilting of the walls, which suggest these systems to achieve efficient and highly packed displacement of trains of walls for spintronics devices. A study, taking into account defects and thermal fluctuations, allows to analyze the validity range of these claimsComisión Europea (P7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN 608031)
Gobierno de España (MAT2014-52477-C5-4-P)
Junta de Castilla y Leon (SA282U14, SA090U16
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