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1.
Nanoscale Adv ; 5(17): 4470-4479, 2023 Aug 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37638152

RESUMO

Synthetic antiferromagnetically coupled (SAF) multilayers provide different physics of stabilizing skyrmions while eliminating the topological Hall effect (THE), enabling efficient and stable control. The effects of material parameters, external current drive, and a magnetic field on the skyrmion equilibrium and propagation characteristics are largely unresolved. Here, we present a computational and theoretical demonstration of the large window of material parameters that stabilize SAF skyrmions determined by saturation magnetization, uniaxial anisotropy, and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. Current-driven SAF skyrmion velocities reach ∼200 m s-1 without the THE. The SAF velocities are about 3-10 times greater than the typical ferromagnetic skyrmion velocities. The current densities needed for driving SAF skyrmions could be reduced to 108 A m-2, while 1011 A m-2 or above is needed for ferromagnetic skyrmions. By reducing the SAF skyrmion drive current by 3 orders, Joule heating is reduced by 6 orders of magnitude. These results pave the way for new SAF interfaces with improved equilibrium, dynamics, and power savings in THE-free skyrmionics.

2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 9496, 2019 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31263133

RESUMO

Skyrmions offer high density, low power, and nonvolatile memory functionalities due to their nanoscale and topologically-protected chiral spin structures. For integrated high-bandwidth devices, one needs to control skyrmion generation and propagation rates using current. Here, we introduce a skyrmion initialization and control method to generate periodic skyrmions from 114 MHz to 21 GHz using spin-polarized direct current. We first initialize a stable magnetic domain profile that is pinned between a notch and a rectangular constriction using a DC pulse. Next, we pass spin-polarized DC charge current to eject periodic skyrmions at a desired frequency. By changing the DC current density, we demonstrate in micromagnetic simulations that skyrmion generation frequencies can be controlled reversibly over more than seven octaves of frequencies. By using domain pinning and current-driven skyrmion motion, we demonstrate a highly tunable and DC-controlled skyrmion signal source, which pave the way towards ultra wideband, compact and integrated skyrmionic circuits.

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