I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[17550]
Open Access
Abstract: We demonstrate the reversible current-induced motion of 180° antiferromagnetic domain walls in a CuMnAs device. By controlling the magnitude and direction of the current pulse, the position of a domain wall can be switched between three distinct pinning sites. The domain wall motion is attributed to a field-like spin–orbit torque that induces the same sense of rotation on each magnetic sublattice, owing to the crystal symmetry of CuMnAs. Domain wall motion is observed for current densities down to ≈2.5×1010 A/m2 at room temperature.
|
Sep 2023
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
M.
Jourdan
,
S.
Reimers
,
Y.
Lytvynenko
,
Y. R.
Niu
,
E.
Golias
,
B.
Sarpi
,
L. S. I.
Veiga
,
T.
Denneulin
,
A.
Kovács
,
R. E.
Dunin-Borkowski
,
J.
Bläßer
,
M.
Klaui
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[30141]
Abstract: Antiferromagnets (AFMs) are promising for future spintronic applications because of their fast dynamics and lack of stray fields. For the required switching of the Néel vector (staggered magnetization), a current induced bulk Néel spin-orbit torque (NSOT) is most promising. Here we demonstrate current pulse induced complete, remanent, and reversible Néel vector switching of epitaxial Mn2Au(001) thin films. A current polarity dependence demonstrates an NSOT acting on AFM domain walls. We correlate direct imaging of the Néel vector reorientation by x-ray photoemission electron microscopy with measurements of the associated anisotropic magnetoresistance [1].
|
Sep 2023
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
C.
Schmitt
,
L.
Sanchez-Tejerina
,
M.
Filianina
,
F.
Fuhrmann
,
H.
Meer
,
R.
Ramos
,
F.
Maccherozzi
,
D.
Backes
,
E.
Saitoh
,
G.
Finocchio
,
L.
Baldrati
,
M.
Klaui
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22448]
Abstract: The understanding of antiferromagnetic domain walls, which are the interface between domains with different Néel order orientations, is a crucial aspect to enable the use of antiferromagnetic materials as active elements in future spintronic devices. In this work, we demonstrate that in antiferromagnetic NiO/Pt bilayers arbitrary-shaped structures can be generated by switching driven by electrical current pulses. The generated domains are T domains, separated from each other by a domain wall whose spins are pointing toward the average direction of the two T domains rather than the common axis of the two planes. Interestingly, this direction is the same for the whole domain wall indicating the absence of strong Lifshitz invariants. The domain wall can be micromagnetically modeled by strain distributions in the NiO thin film induced by the MgO substrate, deviating from the bulk anisotropy. From our measurements we determine the domain-wall width to have a full width at half maximum of
Δ
=
98
±
10
nm, demonstrating strong confinement.
|
May 2023
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
S.
Reimers
,
Y.
Lytvynenko
,
Y. R.
Niu
,
E.
Golias
,
B.
Sarpi
,
L. S. I.
Veiga
,
T.
Denneulin
,
A.
Kovács
,
R. E.
Dunin-Borkowski
,
J.
Bläßer
,
M.
Klaui
,
M.
Jourdan
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[30141]
Open Access
Abstract: Current pulse driven Néel vector rotation in metallic antiferromagnets is one of the most promising concepts in antiferromagnetic spintronics. We show microscopically that the Néel vector of epitaxial thin films of the prototypical compound Mn2Au can be reoriented reversibly in the complete area of cross shaped device structures using single current pulses. The resulting domain pattern with aligned staggered magnetization is long term stable enabling memory applications. We achieve this switching with low heating of ≈20 K, which is promising regarding fast and efficient devices without the need for thermal activation. Current polarity dependent reversible domain wall motion demonstrates a Néel spin-orbit torque acting on the domain walls.
|
Apr 2023
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
Abstract: In antiferromagnetic (AF) materials, magnetic moments align in a regular pattern such that the moments cancel perfectly in each magnetic unit cell. Hence AF materials do not show a net magnetisation and are largely inert against magnetic fields. Thus, the hidden order of antiferromagnets has only been revealed in the last century. For spintronic applications, the use of antiferromagnets promises numerous advantages compared to conventional spintronics based primarily on ferromagnetic (FM) materials. Amongst the key materials for AF spintronics research are tetragonal, antiferromagnetic CuMnAs films, because in addition to being antiferromagnetically ordered at room-temperature, tetragonal CuMnAs is one of only two conductive AF materials, for which it has been shown that the AF order can be manipulated with electrical currents. This has raised hopes for antiferromagnetic memory devices where the AF order in CuMnAs is switched electrical between two different states.
The magnetic moments in CuMnAs films form ferromagnetic sheets (parallel alignment) which are stacked antiparallel along the crystallographic c-direction. The spin axis is confined within the ab-plane, but varies on a microscopic scale, which produces a variety of different AF domain structures. This thesis adresses the question: “what underlies the AF domain structures and how can they be manipulated efficiently?”
Visualising antiferromagnetic domain structures remains experimentally challenging, because the domains do not show a net magnetisation. Here, it is realised by combining photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) with x-ray magnetic linear dichroism (XMLD), which yields sensitivity to the spin axis. These measurements require x-rays with precisely tunable energy. Therefore, this work has largely been performed at a synchrotron, namely Diamond Light Source.
Here, direct imaging of the response of the AF domain structure upon the application of electrical current pulses is used to study the microscopic mechanisms of electric switching in CuMnAs films. In the films studied here, the most efficient switching was found to occur via reversible AF domain wall motion induced by electrical current pulses of alternating polarity. The measurements also reveal the limiting factors of electrical switching in CuMnAs films, namely domain pinning which limits device efficiency and domain relaxation which hinders long-term memory. This illustrates that one needs to be able to precisely tune the material properties for a specific application in order to build efficient AF spintronic devices. Hence, the factors, which govern the AF spin textures in the CuMnAs films, need to be revealed.
This is done by combining direct imaging of the AF domain structure with complementary techniques including electrical measurements, scanning X-ray diffraction and low-energy electron microscopy and diffraction (LEEM, LEED). The measurements reveal that the AF domain patterns are highly sensitive to the crystallographic microstructure including patterned edges and crystallographic defects. In particular, crystallographic microtwin defects are found to largely define the AF domain structure in non-patterned films. The coupling between defects and AF domains can lead to magnetostructural kinetics, where defects and AF domains grow together over weeks at room temperature and over minutes at slightly elevated temperatures of 50°C -70°C. In devices, patterned edges are found to influence the AF domains over tens of micrometers. Combining the knowledge about the effects of microtwin defects and patterned edges on the AF structure helps to understand the microscopic effects of electric current pulses and can form the basis for targeted AF domain engineering.
|
Aug 2022
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
Filip
Krizek
,
Sonka
Reimers
,
Zdeněk
Kašpar
,
Alberto
Marmodoro
,
Jan
Michalička
,
Ondřej
Man
,
Alexander
Edström
,
Oliver J.
Amin
,
Kevin W.
Edmonds
,
Richard P.
Campion
,
Francesco
Maccherozzi
,
Sarnjeet S.
Dhesi
,
Jan
Zubáč
,
Domink
Kriegner
,
Dina
Carbone
,
Jakub
Železný
,
Karel
Výborný
,
Kamil
Olejník
,
Vít
Novák
,
Jan
Rusz
,
Juan-Carlos
Idrobo
,
Peter
Wadley
,
Tomas
Jungwirth
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22437]
Open Access
Abstract: The interest in understanding scaling limits of magnetic textures such as domain walls spans the entire field of magnetism from its physical fundamentals to applications in information technologies. Here, we explore antiferromagnetic CuMnAs in which imaging by x-ray photoemission reveals the presence of magnetic textures down to nanoscale, reaching the detection limit of this established microscopy in antiferromagnets. We achieve atomic resolution by using differential phase-contrast imaging within aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy. We identify abrupt domain walls in the antiferromagnetic film corresponding to the Néel order reversal between two neighboring atomic planes. Our work stimulates research of magnetic textures at the ultimate atomic scale and sheds light on electrical and ultrafast optical antiferromagnetic devices with magnetic field–insensitive neuromorphic functionalities.
|
Apr 2022
|
|
I10-Beamline for Advanced Dichroism - scattering
|
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[14915]
Abstract: Electrostatically defined perovskite oxide heterostructures, in which carriers are confined by the modulation of the A-site ion charge, offer new possibilities of tuning the magnetic properties of manganite oxides. We investigate the preferential orientation of ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic moments in ultrathin
La
0.7
Sr
0.3
MnO
3
layers embedded in antiferromagnetic
Sr
MnO
3
as they undergo a metal-to-insulator transition with decreasing thickness. Our results evince the role of orbital occupation, metallicity, and competition of different magnetic phases, in absence of spurious effects occurring in thin films as a result of symmetry breaking at
La
0.7
Sr
0.3
MnO
3
interfaces and of incorporation of oxygen vacancies.
|
Aug 2021
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
C.
Schmitt
,
L.
Baldrati
,
L.
Sanchez-Tejerina
,
F.
Schreiber
,
A.
Ross
,
M.
Filianina
,
S.
Ding
,
F.
Fuhrmann
,
R.
Ramos
,
F.
Maccherozzi
,
D.
Backes
,
M.-A.
Mawass
,
F.
Kronast
,
S.
Valencia
,
E.
Saitoh
,
G.
Finocchio
,
M.
Klaui
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22448]
Abstract: Understanding the electrical manipulation of the antiferromagnetic order is a crucial aspect to enable the design of antiferromagnetic devices working at THz frequencies. Focusing on collinear insulating antiferromagnetic
Ni
O
/
Pt
thin films as a materials platform, we identify the crystallographic orientation of the domains that can be switched by currents and quantify the Néel-vector direction changes. We demonstrate electrical switching between different T domains by current pulses, finding that the Néel-vector orientation in these domains is along [
±
5
±
5
19], different compared to the bulk
⟨
112
⟩
directions. The final state of the in-plane component of the Néel vector
n
IP
after switching by current pulses
j
along the
[
1
±
1
0
]
directions is
n
IP
∥
j
. By comparing the observed Néel-vector orientation and the strain in the thin films, assuming that this variation arises solely from magnetoelastic effects, we quantify the order of magnitude of the magnetoelastic coupling coefficient as
b
0
+
2
b
1
=
3
×
10
7
J
/
m
3
. This information is key for the understanding of current-induced switching in antiferromagnets and for the design and use of such devices as active elements in spintronic devices.
|
Mar 2021
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
S.
Duttagupta
,
A.
Kurenkov
,
O. A.
Tretiakov
,
G.
Krishnaswamy
,
G.
Sala
,
V.
Krizakova
,
F.
Maccherozzi
,
S. S.
Dhesi
,
P.
Gambardella
,
S.
Fukami
,
H.
Ohno
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[20413]
Open Access
Abstract: The ability to represent information using an antiferromagnetic material is attractive for future antiferromagnetic spintronic devices. Previous studies have focussed on the utilization of antiferromagnetic materials with biaxial magnetic anisotropy for electrical manipulation. A practical realization of these antiferromagnetic devices is limited by the requirement of material-specific constraints. Here, we demonstrate current-induced switching in a polycrystalline PtMn/Pt metallic heterostructure. A comparison of electrical transport measurements in PtMn with and without the Pt layer, corroborated by x-ray imaging, reveals reversible switching of the thermally-stable antiferromagnetic Néel vector by spin-orbit torques. The presented results demonstrate the potential of polycrystalline metals for antiferromagnetic spintronics.
|
Nov 2020
|
|
I06-Nanoscience (XPEEM)
|
T.
Janda
,
J.
Godinho
,
T.
Ostatnicky
,
E.
Pfitzner
,
G.
Ulrich
,
A.
Hoehl
,
S.
Reimers
,
Z.
Šobáň
,
T.
Metzger
,
H.
Reichlová
,
V.
Novák
,
R. P.
Campion
,
J.
Heberle
,
P.
Wadley
,
K. W.
Edmonds
,
O. J.
Amin
,
J. S.
Chauhan
,
S. S.
Dhesi
,
F.
Maccherozzi
,
R. M.
Otxoa
,
P. E.
Roy
,
K.
Olejník
,
P.
Němec
,
T.
Jungwirth
,
B.
Kaestner
,
J.
Wunderlich
Diamond Proposal Number(s):
[22437, 16376, 20793]
Abstract: Antiferromagnets offer spintronic device characteristics unparalleled in ferromagnets owing to their lack of stray fields, THz spin dynamics, and rich materials landscape. Microscopic imaging of antiferromagnetic domains is one of the key prerequisites for understanding physical principles of the device operation. However, adapting common magnetometry techniques to the dipolar-field-free antiferromagnets has been a major challenge. Here we demonstrate in a collinear antiferromagnet a thermoelectric detection method by combining the magneto-Seebeck effect with local heat gradients generated by scanning far-field or near-field techniques. In a 20-nm epilayer of uniaxial CuMnAs we observe reversible
180
∘
switching of the Néel vector via domain wall displacement, controlled by the polarity of the current pulses. We also image polarity-dependent
90
∘
switching of the Néel vector in a thicker biaxial film, and domain shattering induced at higher pulse amplitudes. The antiferromagnetic domain maps obtained by our laboratory technique are compared to measurements by the established synchrotron-based technique of x-ray photoemission electron microscopy using x-ray magnetic linear dichroism.
|
Sep 2020
|
|