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1.
ACS Nano ; 16(6): 8860-8868, 2022 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35580039

ABSTRACT

The fundamental limits currently faced by traditional computing devices necessitate the exploration of ways to store, compute, and transmit information going beyond the current CMOS-based technologies. Here, we propose a three-dimensional (3D) magnetic interconnector that exploits geometry-driven automotion of domain walls (DWs), for the transfer of magnetic information between functional magnetic planes. By combining state-of-the-art 3D nanoprinting and standard physical vapor deposition, we prototype 3D helical DW conduits. We observe the automotion of DWs by imaging their magnetic state under different field sequences using X-ray microscopy, observing a robust unidirectional motion of DWs from the bottom to the top of the spirals. From experiments and micromagnetic simulations, we determine that the large thickness gradients present in the structure are the main mechanism for 3D DW automotion. We obtain direct evidence of how this tailorable magnetic energy gradient is imprinted in the devices, and how it competes with pinning effects that are due to local changes in the energy landscape. Our work also predicts how this effect could lead to high DW velocities, reaching the Walker limit during automotion. This work demonstrates a possible mechanism for efficient transfer of magnetic information in three dimensions.

2.
ACS Nano ; 14(10): 13324-13332, 2020 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33048530

ABSTRACT

For viable applications, spintronic devices based, for example, on domain wall motion need to be highly reliable with stable magnetization states and highly reproducible switching pathways transforming one state to another. The existence of multiple stable states and switching pathways in a system is a definitive barrier for device operation, yet rare and stochastic events are difficult to detect and understand. We demonstrate an approach to quantify competing magnetic states and stochastic switching pathways based on time-resolved scanning electron microscopy with polarization analysis, applied to the technologically relevant control of vortex domain wall chirality via field and curvature in curved wires. As a pump-probe technique, our analysis scheme nonetheless allows for the disentanglement of different occurring dynamic pathways, and we can even identify the rare events leading to changes from one magnetization switching pathway to another pathway via temperature- and geometry-dependent measurements. The experimental imaging is supported by micromagnetic simulations to reveal the mechanisms responsible for the change of the pathway. Together the results allow us to explain the origin and details of the domain wall chirality control and to quantify the frequency and the associated energy barriers of thermally activated changes of the states and switching pathways.

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