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CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Shilei Zhang

Long Term Visitor

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics
shilei.zhang@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72317
Clarendon Laboratory, room 261
  • About
  • Publications

Proposal of a micromagnetic standard problem for ferromagnetic resonance simulations

ArXiv arXiv (2016)

Authors:

Alexander A Baker, Marijan Beg, Gregory Ashton, Maximilian Albert, Dmitri Chernyshenko, Weiwei Wang, Shilei Zhang, Marc-Antonio Bisotti, Matteo Franchin, Chun L Lu, Robert Stamps, Thorsten Hesjedal, Hans Fangohr

Abstract:

Nowadays, micromagnetic simulations are a common tool for studying a wide range of different magnetic phenomena, including the ferromagnetic resonance. A technique for evaluating reliability and validity of different micromagnetic simulation tools is the simulation of proposed standard problems. We propose a new standard problem by providing a detailed specification and analysis of a sufficiently simple problem. By analyzing the magnetization dynamics in a thin permalloy square sample, triggered by a well defined excitation, we obtain the ferromagnetic resonance spectrum and identify the resonance modes via Fourier transform. Simulations are performed using both finite difference and finite element numerical methods, with OOMMF and Nmag simulators, respectively. We report the effects of initial conditions and simulation parameters on the character of the observed resonance modes for this standard problem. We provide detailed instructions and code to assist in using the results for evaluation of new simulator tools, and to help with numerical calculation of ferromagnetic resonance spectra and modes in general.
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Details from ArXiV

Engineering helimagnetism in MnSi thin films

AIP Advances American Institute of Physics 6 (2016) 015217

Authors:

Shilei Zhang, R Chalasani, Alexander A Baker, N-J Steinke, AI Figueroa, A Kohn, G van der Laan, Thorsten Hesjedal

Abstract:

Magnetic skyrmion materials have the great advantage of a robust topological magnetic structure, which makes them stable against the superparamagnetic effect and therefore a candidate for the next-generation of spintronic memory devices. Bulk MnSi, with an ordering temperature of 29.5 K, is a typical skyrmion system with a propagation vector periodicity of ∼18 nm. One crucial prerequisite for any kind of application, however, is the observation and precise control of skyrmions in thin films at room-temperature. Strain in epitaxial MnSi thin films is known to raise the transition temperature to 43 K. Here we show, using magnetometry and x-ray spectroscopy, that the transition temperature can be raised further through proximity coupling to a ferromagnetic layer. Similarly, the external field required to stabilize the helimagnetic phase is lowered. Transmission electron microscopy with element-sensitive detection is used to explore the structural origin of ferromagnetism in these Mn-doped substrates. Our work suggests that an artificial pinning layer, not limited to the MnSi/Si system, may enable room temperature, zero-field skyrmion thin-film systems, thereby opening the door to device applications.
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Transverse field muon-spin rotation measurement of the topological anomaly in a thin film of MnSi

Physical Review B: Condensed Matter and Materials Physics American Physical Society 93:14 (2016) 140412(R)

Authors:

T Lancaster, F Xiao, Z Salman, IO Thomas, Stephen J Blundell, F Pratt, SJ Clark, T Prokscha, A Suter, SL Zhang, Alexander A Baker, Thorsten Hesjedal

Abstract:

We present the results of transverse-field muon-spin rotation measurements on an epitaxially grown 40-nm-thick film of MnSi on Si(111) in the region of the field-temperature phase diagram where a skyrmion phase has been observed in the bulk. We identify changes in the quasistatic magnetic field distribution sampled by the muon, along with evidence for magnetic transitions around T≈40 and 30 K. Our results suggest that the cone phase is not the only magnetic texture realized in film samples for out-of-plane fields.
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Study of Ho-doped Bi2Te3 topological insulator thin films

Applied Physics Letters American Institute of Physics 107:18 (2015) 182406

Authors:

SE Harrison, Liam J Collins-McIntyre, Shilei Zhang, Alexander A Baker, AI Figueroa, AJ Kellock, A Pushp, YL Chen, SSP Parkin, JS Harris, G van der Laan, Thorsten Hesjedal

Abstract:

Breaking time-reversal symmetry through magnetic doping of topological insulators has been identified as a key strategy for unlocking exotic physical states. Here, we report the growth of Bi2Te3 thin films doped with the highest magnetic moment element Ho. Diffraction studies demonstrate high quality films for up to 21% Ho incorporation. Superconducting quantum interference device magnetometry reveals paramagnetism down to 2 K with an effective magnetic moment of ∼5 μB/Ho. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy shows that the topological surface state remains intact with Ho doping, consistent with the material's paramagnetic state. The large saturation moment achieved makes these films useful for incorporation into heterostructures, whereby magnetic order can be introduced via interfacial coupling.
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Topological computation based on direct magnetic logic communication

Scientific Reports Nature Publishing Group 5 (2015)

Authors:

Shilei Zhang, Alexander A Baker, Stavros Komineas, Thorsten Hesjedal

Abstract:

Non-uniform magnetic domains with non-trivial topology, such as vortices and skyrmions, are proposed as superior state variables for nonvolatile information storage. So far, the possibility of logic operations using topological objects has not been considered. Here, we demonstrate numerically that the topology of the system plays a significant role for its dynamics, using the example of vortex-antivortex pairs in a planar ferromagnetic film. Utilising the dynamical properties and geometrical confinement, direct logic communication between the topological memory carriers is realised. This way, no additional magnetic-to-electrical conversion is required. More importantly, the information carriers can spontaneously travel up to ~300 nm, for which no spin-polarised current is required. The derived logic scheme enables topological spintronics, which can be integrated into large-scale memory and logic networks capable of complex computations.
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