Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Room-Temperature Current-Induced Generation and Motion of sub-100 nm Skyrmions

2017; American Chemical Society; Volume: 17; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b00649

ISSN

1530-6992

Autores

William Legrand, Davide Maccariello, Nicolas Reyren, K. Garcia, Christoforos Moutafis, Constance Moreau-Luchaire, Sophie Collin, K. Bouzéhouane, Vincent Cros, A. Fert,

Tópico(s)

Semiconductor Quantum Structures and Devices

Resumo

Magnetic skyrmions are nanoscale windings of the spin configuration that hold great promise for technology due to their topology-related properties and extremely reduced sizes. After the recent observation at room temperature of sub-100 nm skyrmions stabilized by interfacial chiral interaction in magnetic multilayers, several pending questions remain to be solved, notably about the means to nucleate individual compact skyrmions or the exact nature of their motion. In this study, a method leading to the formation of magnetic skyrmions in a micrometer-sized nanotrack using homogeneous current injection is evidenced. Spin-transfer-induced motion of these small electricalcurrent-generated skyrmions is then demonstrated and the role of the out-of-plane magnetic field in the stabilization of the moving skyrmions is also analysed. The results of these experimental observations of spin torque induced motion are compared to micromagnetic simulations reproducing a granular type, non-uniform magnetic multilayer, in order to address the particularly important role of the magnetic inhomogeneities on the current-induced motion of sub-100 nm skyrmions, for which the material grains size is comparable to the skyrmion diameter.

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