Beyond conventional skyrmions in synthetic antiferromagnets
Kayla Fallon, Reshma Peremadathil-Pradeep, Christopher E. A. Barker, Zoey Tumbleson, Emily Darwin + 12 more
TLDR
This paper engineers synthetic antiferromagnets to reveal two distinct skyrmion families with controlled polarity, enabling programmable 3D spin textures.
Key contributions
- Engineered a synthetic antiferromagnet (SAF) using chemically distinct CoB and CoFeB layers.
- Discovered two distinct skyrmion families (conventional and inverse polarity) based on an effective-field.
- Confirmed independent nucleation pathways for each skyrmion family using return-point memory measurements.
- Showed skyrmion textures reside only in CoFeB layers due to RKKY exchange from CoB layers.
Why it matters
This research provides a robust method for creating programmable three-dimensional spin textures with controlled polarity in specific layers of a multilayer. This breakthrough has significant potential for advancing skyrmion-based computing and spin-logic architectures.
Original Abstract
Magnetic skyrmions are topologically protected spin textures that can act as reconfigurable nanoscale information carriers. In synthetic antiferromagnets (SAFs), interlayer exchange coupling offers an additional control parameter beyond the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) and magnetic anisotropy. Here, we engineer a SAF composed of two chemically distinct ferromagnets (CoB and CoFeB), in which the external magnetic field and interlayer exchange act asymmetrically on the sublattices. The competition of these effects, acting as a resultant effective-field, gives rise to two distinct skyrmion families in different field regimes. In large fields, conventional-polarity skyrmions nucleate, with core antiparallel to the external field, whereas in smaller fields an inverse-polarity skyrmion state emerges as the effective-field reverses sign and almost saturates the CoFeB layers. Return-point memory measurements confirm independent nucleation pathways for the two families. Using element-resolved x-ray magnetometry, correlative magnetic force and Lorentz transmission electron microscopies, and parameter-matched micromagnetic modelling, we show that all textures reside only in the CoFeB layers, which experience a Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) exchange field originating from the CoB layers. This effective-field method provides a robust route to programmable three-dimensional spin textures with controlled polarity in selected layers of a multilayer with potential for applications in skyrmion-based computing and spin-logic architectures.
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