anisotropy (PMA). In ultrathin films, skyrmions can exhibit sub-nanometer scale size [8][9][10][11] and move in response to an applied current with velocities exceeding 100 m s -1 [5] in a controllable [12,13] and reliable [13] way. Therefore, they promise great technological utility for racetracktype memories, [14] logic gates, [15] probabilistic computing, [16] and neuromorphic devices, [17] for which they have to be readily created and manipulated. Homochiral skyrmions can be stabilized by the Dzyaloshinkii-Moriya interaction (DMI) [18,19] in materials with strong spin-orbit coupling and broken inversion symmetry. Since asymmetric multilayer stacks of a ferromagnet and a heavy metal [5][6][7] possess DMI and can also exhibit large current-induced spin-orbit torques that can provide an efficient means to create and manipulate skyrmions, [20][21][22] these systems are now a central focus of current research. Magnetic skyrmions can exist as isolated topological excitations, [23,24] or as ordered arrays (hexagonal lattice) comprising the magnetic ground state, [2,5] depending on material and Magnetic skyrmions promise breakthroughs in future memory and computing devices due to their inherent stability and small size. Their creation and current driven motion have been recently observed at room temperature, but the key mechanisms of their formation are not yet well-understood. Here it is shown that in heavy metal/ferromagnet heterostructures, pulsed currents can drive morphological transitions between labyrinth-like, stripe-like, and skyrmionic states. Using high-resolution X-ray microscopy, the spin texture evolution with temperature and magnetic field is imaged and it is demonstrated that with transient Joule heating, topological charges can be injected into the system, driving it across the stripe-skyrmion boundary. The observations are explained through atomistic spin dynamic and micromagnetic simulations that reveal a crossover to a global skyrmionic ground state above a threshold magnetic field, which is found to decrease with increasing temperature. It is demonstrated how by tuning the phase stability, one can reliably generate skyrmions by short current pulses and stabilize them at zero field, providing new means to create and manipulate spin textures in engineered chiral ferromagnets. Magnetic SkyrmionsThe ORCID identification number(s) for the author(s) of this article can be found under https://doi.
We examine the current-induced dynamics of a skyrmion that is subject to both structural and bulk inversion asymmetry. There arises a hybrid type of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) which is in the form of a mixture of interfacial and bulk DMIs. Examples include crystals with symmetry classes Cn as well as magnetic multilayers composed of a ferromagnet with a noncentrosymmetric crystal and a nonmagnet with strong spin-orbit coupling. As a striking result, we find that, in systems with a hybrid DMI, the spin-orbit-torque-induced skyrmion Hall angle is asymmetric for the two different skyrmion polarities (±1 given by out-of-plane core magnetization), even allowing one of them to be tuned to zero. We propose several experimental ways to achieve the necessary straight skyrmion motion (with zero Hall angle) for racetrack memories, even without antiferromagnetic interactions or any interaction with another magnet. Our results can be understood within a simple picture by using a global spin rotation which maps the hybrid DMI model to an effective model containing purely interfacial DMI. The formalism directly reveals the effective spin torque and effective current that result in qualitatively different dynamics. Our work provides a way to utilize symmetry breaking to eliminate detrimental phenomena as hybrid DMI eliminates the skyrmion Hall angle. arXiv:1802.07327v2 [cond-mat.mes-hall]
Phases of matter are ubiquitous with everyday examples including solids and liquids. In reduced dimensions, particular phases, such as the 2D hexatic phase and corresponding phase transitions occur. A particularly exciting example of 2D ordered systems are skyrmion lattices, where in contrast to previously studied 2D colloid systems, the skyrmion size and density can be tuned by temperature and magnetic fields. This allows for the system to be driven from a liquid phase to the onset of a hexatic phase as deduced from the analysis of the hexagonal order. Using coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations of soft disks, the skyrmion interaction potentials are determined, and it is found that the simulations are able to reproduce the phase behavior. This shows that not only the static behavior of skyrmions is qualitatively well described in terms of a simple 2D model system but skyrmion lattices are versatile and tunable 2D model systems that allow for studying phases and phase transitions in reduced dimensions.
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