APS March Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2015;
San Antonio, Texas
Session A28: Focus Session: Skyrmions I
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Monday, March 2, 2015
Room: 205
Sponsoring
Units:
GMAG DMP FIAP
Chair: John Xiao, University of Delaware
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.MAR.A28.1
Abstract: A28.00001 : Magnetic droplets and dynamical skyrmions
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Johan Akerman
(University of Gothenburg)
Nanocontact spin-torque oscillators (NC-STOs) provide an excellent
environment for studying nano-magnetic phenomena such as localized and
propagating auto-oscillatory spin wave (SW) modes. The recent experimental
observation of magnetic droplet solitons in NC-STOs with perpendicular
magnetic anisotropy (PMA) free layers [1], and the numerical [2] and
experimental [3] demonstrations of spin transfer torque (STT) nucleated
skyrmions in similar magnetic thin films add two interesting and useful
nanoscale magnetic objects. Due to the competition between exchange,
anisotropy, and, in the case of skyrmions, the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
interaction (DMI), the droplet and the skyrmion are extremely compact, on
the order of 10-100 nm. One of the main differences between a magnetic
dissipative droplet soliton and a skyrmion is that the former is a dynamical
object with all its spins precessing around an effective field and
stabilized by STT, exchange, and PMA, while the latter has static spins and
an internal structure stabilized by DMI, exchange, and PMA. The dissipative
droplet is furthermore a non-topological soliton, while the skyrmion is
topologically protected. In this work I will report on our most recent
droplet experiments, including droplet collapse at very high fields,
droplets excited in nano-wire based NC-STOs, and studies of the
field-current droplet nucleation boundary. I will also demonstrate
numerically and analytically that STT driven precession can stabilize
so-called dynamical skyrmions even in the absence of DMI, and I will
describe their very promising properties in detail. From a more fundamental
perspective, precession is hence a third independent possibility to
stabilize a skyrmion, without the need for the conventional stabilization
from either dipolar energy or DMI.
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[1] S. M. Mohseni et al, Science 339, 1295 (2013).\\[0pt]
[2] J. Sampaio et al, Nature Nanotechn. 8, 839 (2013).\\[0pt]
[3] N. Romming et al, Science 341, 636 (2013)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.MAR.A28.1