Magnetic skyrmions are topologically nontrivial particles with a potential application as information elements in future spintronic device architectures 1, 2 . While they are commonly portrayed as two dimensional objects, in reality magnetic skyrmions are thought to exist as elongated, tube-like objects extending through the thickness of the sample 3, 4 . The study of this skyrmion tube (SkT) state is highly relevant for investigating skyrmion metastability 5 and for implementation in recently proposed magnonic computing 6 . However, direct experimental imaging of skyrmion tubes has yet to be reported. Here, we demonstrate the first real-space observation of skyrmion tubes in a lamella of FeGe using resonant magnetic x-ray imaging and comparative micromagnetic simulations, confirming their extended structure.The formation of these structures at the edge of the sample highlights the importance of confinement and edge effects in the stabilisation of the SkT state, opening the door to further investigations into this unexplored dimension of the skyrmion spin texture.Skyrmion states are typically stabilised by the interplay of the ferromagnetic exchange and Zeeman energies with the Dzyalohsinskii-Moriya Interaction (DMI) 7 . In ferromagnet/heavy metal multilayer thin films, interfacial DMI is induced by symmetry-breaking spin-orbit coupling at the interface between the layers, leading to the formation of Néel-type skyrmions [8][9][10] . Bulk DMI, arising due to the lack of centrosymmetry in the underlying crystal lattice, is responsible for the formation of Bloch-type skyrmions in a range of chiral ferromagnets [11][12][13][14][15] . In crystals of these bulk materials the skyrmion state is typically only at equilibrium in a limited range of applied magnetic field and temperature just below the Curie temperature, T c , forming a hexagonal skyrmion lattice (SkL) in a plane perpendicular to the applied magnetic field.2 Figure 1 | Visualisation of the skyrmion tube spin texture. Three dimensional visualisation of three magnetic skyrmion tubes from the micromagnetic simulations presented in this paper, illustrating their extended spin structure. The inset highlights the location of the magnetic Bloch point at the end of each skyrmion tube. 3The three dimensional visualisation in Fig. 1 depicts the extended spin structure of three magnetic skyrmion tubes. The dynamics of this skyrmion tube (SkT) state play an important role in the creation and annihilation of skyrmions. For example, metastable skyrmions, which are created beyond the equilibrium thermal range by rapid field cooling 16 , are thought to unwind into topologically trivial magnetic states through the motion of a magnetic Bloch point located at the end of each individual skyrmion tube 3, 5 . Real-space observation of this dimension of the SkT state and its associated dynamics requires an in-plane magnetic field applied perpendicular to the imaging axis. Electron imaging techniques such as Fresnel Lorentz Transmission Electron Microscopy (LTEM) 12, 13 , and elec...
2. The concept of a skyrmion was introduced in 1961 in the context of nuclear physics [2] and in 1989, magnetic skyrmions were predicted [3] to occur as a result of the competition between the Heisenberg exchange energy and the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. [4] We use the term "DMskyrmions" to refer to such objects.DM-skyrmions were found experimentally [5] in bulk MnSi in 2009. This prompted the recent intense research effort as
Previous observations of metastable magnetic skyrmions have shown that close to the equilibrium pocket the metastable state has a short lifetime, and therefore rapid cooling is required to generate a significant skyrmion population at low temperatures. Here, we report that the lifetime of metastable skyrmions in Cu2OSeO3 is extended by a factor of 50 with the introduction of only 2.5% zinc doping, allowing over 50% of the population to survive when field-cooling at a rate of just 1 K/min. Our systematic study suggests that the lifetime enhancement is due to the removal of spins by the nonmagnetic dopant, which entropically limits the number of skyrmion decay pathways. We expect that doping can be exploited to control the lifetime of the metastable SkL state in other chiral magnets, offering a method of engineering skyrmion materials towards application in future devices. arXiv:1809.02590v2 [cond-mat.str-el]
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