Atomic and electronic structure of twin growth defects in magnetite.

Scientific reports 6 (2016) 20943

Authors:

Daniel Gilks, Zlatko Nedelkoski, Leonardo Lari, Balati Kuerbanjiang, Kosuke Matsuzaki, Tomofumi Susaki, Demie Kepaptsoglou, Quentin Ramasse, Richard Evans, Keith McKenna, Vlado K Lazarov

Abstract:

We report the existence of a stable twin defect in Fe3O4 thin films. By using aberration corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy and spectroscopy the atomic structure of the twin boundary has been determined. The boundary is confined to the (111) growth plane and it is non-stoichiometric due to a missing Fe octahedral plane. By first principles calculations we show that the local atomic structural configuration of the twin boundary does not change the nature of the superexchange interactions between the two Fe sublattices across the twin grain boundary. Besides decreasing the half-metallic band gap at the boundary the altered atomic stacking at the boundary does not change the overall ferromagnetic (FM) coupling between the grains.

Spin-orbit torque magnetization switching controlled by geometry.

Nature nanotechnology 11:2 (2016) 143-146

Authors:

CK Safeer, Emilie Jué, Alexandre Lopez, Liliana Buda-Prejbeanu, Stéphane Auffret, Stefania Pizzini, Olivier Boulle, Ioan Mihai Miron, Gilles Gaudin

Abstract:

Magnetization reversal by an electric current is essential for future magnetic data storage technology, such as magnetic random access memories. Typically, an electric current is injected into a pillar-shaped magnetic element, and switching relies on the transfer of spin momentum from a ferromagnetic reference layer (an approach known as spin-transfer torque). Recently, an alternative technique has emerged that uses spin-orbit torque (SOT) and allows the magnetization to be reversed without a polarizing layer by transferring angular momentum directly from the crystal lattice. With spin-orbit torque, the current is no longer applied perpendicularly, but is in the plane of the magnetic thin film. Therefore, the current flow is no longer restricted to a single direction and can have any orientation within the film plane. Here, we use Kerr microscopy to examine spin-orbit torque-driven domain wall motion in Co/AlOx wires with different shapes and orientations on top of a current-carrying Pt layer. The displacement of the domain walls is found to be highly dependent on the angle between the direction of the current and domain wall motion, and asymmetric and nonlinear with respect to the current polarity. Using these insights, devices are fabricated in which magnetization switching is determined entirely by the geometry of the device.

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.

Anisotropic absorption of pure spin currents

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 116 (2016) 047201

Authors:

Alexander Baker, AI Figueroa, CJ Love, SA Cavill, Thorsten Hesjedal, G van der Laan

Abstract:

Spin transfer in magnetic multilayers offers the possibility of ultra-fast, low-power device operation. We report a study of spin pumping in spin valves, demonstrating that a strong anisotropy of spin pumping from the source layer can be induced by an angular dependence of the total Gilbert damping parameter, a, in the spin sink layer. Using lab- and synchrotron-based ferromagnetic resonance, we show that an in-plane variation of damping in a crystalline leads to an anisotropic a in a polycrystalline . This anisotropy is suppressed above the spin diffusion length in Cr, which is found to be 8 nm, and is independent of static exchange coupling in the spin valve. These results offer a valuable insight into the transmission and absorption of spin currents, and a mechanism by which enhanced spin torques and angular control may be realized for next-generation spintronic devices.

Atomic level structural and chemical analysis of Cr-doped Bi₂Se₃

Scientific Reports Nature Publishing Group 6 (2016) 26549

Authors:

A Ghasemi, D Kepaptsoglou, LJ Collins-McIntyre, Q Ramasse, Thorsten Hesjedal, VK Lazarov

Abstract:

We present a study of the structure and chemical composition of the Cr-doped 3D topological insulator Bi2Se3. Single-crystalline thin films were grown by molecular beam epitaxy on Al2O3 (0001), and their structural and chemical properties determined on an atomic level by aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy and electron energy loss spectroscopy. A regular quintuple layer stacking of the Bi2Se3 film is found, with the exception of the first several atomic layers in the initial growth. The spectroscopy data give direct evidence that Cr is preferentially substituting for Bi in the Bi2Se3 host. We also show that Cr has a tendency to segregate at internal grain boundaries of the Bi2Se3 film.