A major challenge for future spintronics is to develop suitable spin transport channels with long spin lifetime and propagation length. Graphene can meet these requirements, even at room temperature. On the other side, taking advantage of the fast motion of chiral textures, that is, Néel-type domain walls and magnetic skyrmions, can satisfy the demands for high-density data storage, low power consumption, and high processing speed. We have engineered epitaxial structures where an epitaxial ferromagnetic Co layer is sandwiched between an epitaxial Pt(111) buffer grown in turn onto MgO(111) substrates and a graphene layer. We provide evidence of a graphene-induced enhancement of the perpendicular magnetic anisotropy up to 4 nm thick Co films and of the existence of chiral left-handed Néel-type domain walls stabilized by the effective Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) in the stack. The experiments show evidence of a sizable DMI at the gr/Co interface, which is described in terms of a conduction electron mediated Rashba-DMI mechanism and points opposite to the spin orbit coupling-induced DMI at the Co/Pt interface. In addition, the presence of graphene results in (i) a surfactant action for the Co growth, producing an intercalated, flat, highly perfect face-centered cubic film, pseudomorphic with Pt and (ii) an efficient protection from oxidation. The magnetic chiral texture is stable at room temperature and grown on insulating substrate. Our findings open new routes to control chiral spin structures using interfacial engineering in graphene-based systems for future spin-orbitronics devices fully integrated on oxide substrates.
We have studied a series of Pt/Co/M epitaxial trilayers, in which Co is
sandwiched between Pt and a non magnetic layer M (Pt, Ir, Cu, Al). Using polar
magneto-optical Kerr microscopy, we show that the field- induced domain wall
speeds are strongly dependent on the nature of the top layer, they increase
going from M=Pt to lighter top metallic overlayers, and can reach several 100
m/s for Pt/Co/Al. The DW dynamics is consistent with the presence of chiral
N\'eel walls stabilized by interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI)
whose strength increases going from Pt to Al top layers. This is explained by
the presence of DMI with opposite sign at the Pt/Co and Co/M interfaces, the
latter increasing in strength going towards heavier atoms, possibly due to the
increasing spin-orbit interaction. This work shows that in non-centrosymmetric
trilayers the domain wall dynamics can be finely tuned by engineering the DMI
strength, in view of efficient devices for logic and spitronics applications.Comment: 5 pages, 4 Figure
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