Materials hosting magnetic skyrmions at room temperature could enable compact and energetically-efficient storage such as racetrack memories, where information is coded by the presence/absence of skyrmions forming a moving chain through the device. The skyrmion Hall effect leading to their annihilation at the racetrack edges can be suppressed, for example, by antiferromagnetically-coupled skyrmions. However, avoiding modifications of the inter-skyrmion distances remains challenging. As a solution, a chain of bits could also be encoded by two different solitons, such as a skyrmion and a chiral bobber, with the limitation that it has solely been realized in B20-type materials at low temperatures. Here, we demonstrate that a hybrid ferro/ferri/ferromagnetic multilayer system can host two distinct skyrmion phases at room temperature, namely tubular and partial skyrmions. Furthermore, the tubular skyrmion can be converted into a partial skyrmion. Such systems may serve as a platform for designing memory applications using distinct skyrmion types.
In this paper, the thermal stability of skyrmion bubbles and the critical currents to move them over pinning sites were investigated. For the used pinning geometries and the used parameters, the unexpected behavior is reported that the energy barrier to overcome the pinning site is larger than the energy barrier of the annihilation of a skyrmion. The annihilation takes place at boundaries by current driven motion, as well as due to the excitation over energy barriers, in the absence of currents, without forming Bloch points. It is reported that the pinning sites, which are required to allow thermally stable bits, significantly increase the critical current densities to move the bits in skyrmion-like structures to about jcrit = 0.62 TA/m². The simulation shows that the applied spin transfer model predicts experimentally obtained critical currents to move stable skyrmions at room temperature well, which is in contrast to simulations based on spin orbit torque that predict significantly too low critical currents. By calculating the thermal stability, as well as the critical current, we can derive the spin torque efficiency η = ΔE/Ic = 0.19 kBT300/μA, which is in a similar range to the simulated spin torque efficiency of MRAM structures. Finally, it is shown that the stochastic depinning process of any racetrack-like device requires an extremely narrow depinning time distribution smaller than ~6% of the current pulse length to reach bit error rates smaller than 10−9.
We perform micromagnetic simulations to study the switching barriers in square artificial spin ice systems consisting of elongated single domain magnetic islands arranged on a square lattice. By considering a double vertex composed of one central island and six nearest neighbor islands, we calculate the energy barriers between two types of double vertices by applying the simplified and improved string method. We investigate by means of micromagnetic simulations the consequences of the neighboring islands, the inhomogeneities in the magnetization of the islands and the reversal mechanisms on the energy barrier by comparing three different approaches with increasing complexity. The micromagnetic models, where the string method is applied, are compared to a method commonly in use, the mean barrier approximation. Our investigations indicate that a proper micromagnetic modeling of the switching process leads to significantly lower energy barriers, by up to 35% compared to the mean-barrier approximation, so decreasing the expected average life time up to seven orders of magnitude. Hereby, we investigate the influence of parallel switching channels and the conceptional approach of using a mean-barrier to calculate the corresponding rates.
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