APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019;
Boston, Massachusetts
Session V41: Skyrmion Transport and Topological Hall Effect
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Thursday, March 7, 2019
BCEC
Room: 209
Sponsoring
Units:
GMAG DMP
Chair: Shulei Zhang, Argonne National Laboratory
Abstract: V41.00001 : Reservoir Computing with Random Skyrmion Fabrics
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
View Presentation
Abstract
Presenter:
Daniele Pinna
(Johannes Gutenberg University)
Author:
Daniele Pinna
(Johannes Gutenberg University)
The topologically protected magnetic spin configurations known as skyrmions offer promising applications due to their stability, mobility and localization. Thanks to their many nanoscale properties, skyrmions have been shown to be promising in many applications ranging from non-volatile memory and spintronic logic devices, to enabling the implementation of unconventional computational standards such as Stochastic computing. In this talk we will discuss how a random skyrmion ``fabric'' composed of skyrmion clusters embedded in a magnetic substrate can be effectively employed to implement a functional Reservoir Computing device for recognizing and predicting spatio-temporal events. This is achieved by leveraging the nonlinear resistive response of the individual skyrmions arising from their current dependent anisotropic magneto-resistance effect (AMR). Complex time-varying current signals injected via contacts into the magnetic substrate are shown to be modulated nonlinearly by the fabric's AMR due to the current distribution following paths of least resistance as it traverses the geometry. By tracking resistances across multiple input and output contacts, we show how the instantaneous current distribution effectively carries temporally correlated information about the injected signal. This in turn allows us to numerically demonstrate simple pattern recognition. We argue that the fundamental ingredients for such a device to work are threefold: i) Concurrent probing of the magnetic state; ii) stable ground state when forcings are removed; iii) nonlinear response to input forcing. Whereas we demonstrate this by employing skyrmion fabrics, the basic ingredients should be general enough to spur the interest of the greater magnetism and magnetic materials community to explore novel reservoir computing systems.