2 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
VoltageâControlled Deblocking of Magnetization Reversal in Thin Films by Tunable Domain Wall Interactions and Pinning Sites
High energy efficiency of magnetic devices is crucial for applications such as data storage, computation, and actuation. Redoxâbased (magnetoâionic) voltage control of magnetism is a promising roomâtemperature pathway to improve energy efficiency. However, for ferromagnetic metals, the magnetoâionic effects studied so far require ultrathin films with tunable perpendicular magnetic anisotropy or nanoporous structures for appreciable effects. This paper reports a fully reversible, low voltageâinduced collapse of coercivity and remanence by redox reactions in iron oxide/iron films with uniaxial inâplane anisotropy. In the initial iron oxide/iron films, NĂ©el wall interactions stabilize a blocked state with high coercivity. During the voltageâtriggered reduction of the iron oxide layer, in situ Kerr microscopy reveals inverse changes of coercivity and anisotropy, and a coarsening of the magnetic microstructure. These results confirm a magnetoâionic deblocking mechanism, which relies on changes of the NĂ©el wall interactions, and of the microstructural domainâwallâpinning sites. With this approach, voltageâcontrolled 180° magnetization switching with high energyâefficiency is achieved. It opens up possibilities for developing magnetic devices programmable by ultralow power and for the reversible tuning of defectâcontrolled materials in general
VoltageâControlled Deblocking of Magnetization Reversal in Thin Films by Tunable Domain Wall Interactions and Pinning Sites
High energy efficiency of magnetic devices is crucial for applications such as data storage, computation, and actuation. Redoxâbased (magnetoâionic) voltage control of magnetism is a promising roomâtemperature pathway to improve energy efficiency. However, for ferromagnetic metals, the magnetoâionic effects studied so far require ultrathin films with tunable perpendicular magnetic anisotropy or nanoporous structures for appreciable effects. This paper reports a fully reversible, low voltageâinduced collapse of coercivity and remanence by redox reactions in iron oxide/iron films with uniaxial inâplane anisotropy. In the initial iron oxide/iron films, NĂ©el wall interactions stabilize a blocked state with high coercivity. During the voltageâtriggered reduction of the iron oxide layer, in situ Kerr microscopy reveals inverse changes of coercivity and anisotropy, and a coarsening of the magnetic microstructure. These results confirm a magnetoâionic deblocking mechanism, which relies on changes of the NĂ©el wall interactions, and of the microstructural domainâwallâpinning sites. With this approach, voltageâcontrolled 180° magnetization switching with high energyâefficiency is achieved. It opens up possibilities for developing magnetic devices programmable by ultralow power and for the reversible tuning of defectâcontrolled materials in general