57 research outputs found
Advances in the Physics of Magnetic Skyrmions and Perspective for Technology
Magnetic skyrmions are small swirling topological defects in the
magnetization texture stabilized by the protection due to their topology. In
most cases they are induced by chiral interactions between atomic spins
existing in non-centrosymmetric magnetic compounds or in thin films in which
inversion symmetry is broken by the presence of an interface. The skyrmions can
be extremely small with diameters in the nanometer range and, importantly, they
behave as particles that can be moved, created or annihilated, making them
suitable for abacus-type applications in information storage, logic or
neuro-inspired technologies. Up to the last years skyrmions were observed only
at low temperature (and in most cases under large applied fields) but important
efforts of research has been recently devoted to find thin film and
multilayered structures in which skyrmions are stabilized above room
temperature and manipulated by current. This article focuses on these recent
advances on the route to devices prototypes.Comment: Published online 13 June 2017 : 17 pages, 8 figures and 2 boxe
Electrical signature of individual magnetic skyrmions in multilayered systems
Magnetic skyrmions are topologically protected whirling spin textures that
can be stabilized in magnetic materials in which a chiral interaction is
present. Their limited size together with their robustness against the external
perturbations promote them as the ultimate magnetic storage bit in a novel
generation of memory and logic devices. Despite many examples of the signature
of magnetic skyrmions in the electrical signal, only low temperature
measurements, mainly in magnetic materials with B20 crystal structure, have
demonstrated the skyrmions contribution to the electrical transport properties.
Using the combination of Magnetic Force Microscopy (MFM) and Hall resistivity
measurements, we demonstrate the electrical detection of sub-100 nm skyrmions
in multilayered thin film at room temperature (RT). We furthermore analyse the
room temperature Hall signal of a single skyrmion which contribution is mainly
dominated by anomalous Hall effect.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Electrical control of magnetism by electric field and current-induced torques
While early magnetic memory designs relied on magnetization switching by
locally generated magnetic fields, key insights in condensed matter physics
later suggested the possibility to do it electrically. In the 1990s,
Slonczewzki and Berger formulated the concept of current-induced spin torques
in magnetic multilayers through which a spin-polarized current may switch the
magnetization of a ferromagnet. This discovery drove the development of
spin-transfer-torque magnetic random-access memories (STT-MRAMs). More recent
research unveiled spin-orbit-torques (SOTs) and will lead to a new generation
of devices including SOT-MRAMs. Parallel to these advances, multiferroics and
their magnetoelectric coupling experienced a renaissance, leading to novel
device concepts for information and communication technology such as the MESO
transistor. The story of the electrical control of magnetization is that of a
dance between fundamental research (in spintronics, condensed matter physics,
and materials science) and technology (MRAMs, MESO, microwave emitters,
spin-diodes, skyrmion-based devices, components for neuromorphics, etc). This
pas de deux led to major breakthroughs over the last decades (pure spin
currents, magnetic skyrmions, spin-charge interconversion, etc). As a result,
this field has propelled MRAMs into consumer electronics products but also
fueled discoveries in adjacent research areas such as ferroelectrics or
magnonics. Here, we cover recent advances in the control of magnetism by
electric fields and by current-induced torques. We first review fundamental
concepts in these two directions, then discuss their combination, and finally
present various families of devices harnessing the electrical control of
magnetic properties for various application fields. We conclude by giving
perspectives in terms of both emerging fundamental physics concepts and new
directions in materials science.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in Reviews of Modern Physic
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Electrical control of magnetism by electric field and current-induced torques
Hybrid chiral domain walls and skyrmions in magnetic multilayers
Noncollinear spin textures in ferromagnetic ultrathin films are currently the
subject of renewed interest since the discovery of the interfacial
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI). This antisymmetric exchange
interaction selects a given chirality for the spin textures and allows
stabilising configurations with nontrivial topology. Moreover, it has many
crucial consequences on the dynamical properties of these topological
structures, including chiral domain walls (DWs) and magnetic skyrmions. In the
recent years the study of noncollinear spin textures has been extended from
single ultrathin layers to magnetic multilayers with broken inversion symmetry.
This extension of the structures in the vertical dimension allows very
efficient current-induced motion and room-temperature stability for both N\'eel
DWs and skyrmions. Here we show how in such multilayered systems the interlayer
interactions can actually lead to more complex, hybrid chiral magnetisation
arrangements. The described thickness-dependent reorientation of DWs is
experimentally confirmed by studying demagnetised multilayers through circular
dichroism in x-ray resonant magnetic scattering. We also demonstrate a simple
yet reliable method for determining the magnitude of the DMI from static
domains measurements even in the presence of these hybrid chiral structures, by
taking into account the actual profile of the DWs. The advent of these novel
hybrid chiral textures has far-reaching implications on how to stabilise and
manipulate DWs as well as skymionic structures in magnetic multilayers.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
Spin-Torque Diode Measurements of MgO-Based Magnetic Tunnel Junctions with Asymmetric Electrodes
We present a detailed study of the spin-torque diode effect in
CoFeB/MgO/CoFe/NiFe magnetic tunnel junctions. From the evolution of the
resonance frequency with magnetic field at different angles, we clearly
identify the free-layer mode and find an excellent agreement with simulations
by taking into account several terms for magnetic anisotropy. Moreover, we
demonstrate the large contribution of the out-of-plane torque in our junctions
with asymmetric electrodes compared to the in-plane torque. Consequently, we
provide a way to enhance the sensitivity of these devices for the detection of
microwave frequency
Driving skyrmions in flow regime in synthetic ferrimagnets
Despite significant advances in the last decade regarding the room
temperature stabilization of skyrmions or their current induced dynamics, the
impact of local material inhomogeneities still remains an important issue that
impedes to reach the regime of steady state motion of these spin textures.
Here, we study the spin-torque driven motion of skyrmions in synthetic
ferrimagnetic multilayers with the aim of achieving high mobility and reduced
skyrmion Hall effect. We consider Pt|Co|Tb multilayers of various thicknesses
with antiferromagnetic coupling between the Co and Tb magnetization. The
increase of Tb thickness in the multilayers allows to reduce the total magnetic
moment and increases the spin-orbit torques allowing to reach velocities up to
400 m.s-1 for skyrmions with diameters of about 160 nm. We demonstrate that due
to reduced skyrmion Hall effect, combined with the edge repulsion of the
magnetic track making the skyrmions moving along the track without any
transverse deflection. Further, by comparing the field-induced domain wall
motion and current-induced skyrmion motion, we demonstrate that the skyrmions
at the largest current densities present all the characteristics of a dynamical
flow regime.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Frequency converter based on nanoscale MgO magnetic tunnel junctions
We observe both dc voltage rectification and frequency conversion that occur
when a reference microwave current is injected to a MgO based magnetic tunnel
junction (MTJ). The rectification that is spin-transfer torque dependent is
observed when the frequency of the input microwave current coincides with the
resonance frequency of the magnetization of the active layer. In addition, we
demonstrate that frequency conversion is the result of amplitude modulation
between the reference signal and the resistance of the MTJ that is fluctuating
at the resonance frequency of the magnetization of the active layer.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
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