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1.
Nano Lett ; 20(10): 7313-7320, 2020 Oct 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32969656

RESUMEN

Exotic topological spin textures such as emergent magnetic monopole/anti-monopoles (hedgehog/anti-hedgehog) in the metastable extended skyrmion-strings attract much attention to the fundamental physics owing to their novel electromagnetic properties. However, the direct imaging of such spin textures is lacking. Here, we report the real-space observation of emergent magnetic monopoles involved in extended skyrmion-strings by Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM) in combination with micromagnetic simulations. The in-plane extended skyrmion-strings are observed directly by Lorentz TEM to accompany the topological hedgehog-like defect, where the skyrmion-string terminates or merges with another skyrmion-string, as well as the surface-related defects where skyrmion-string bends 90° and ends on the surface. We also demonstrate the transformation of a metastabilized lattice of out-of-plane short skyrmion-strings into an in-plane array of extended skyrmion-strings by tuning the magnitude of oblique fields in a room-temperature helimagnet, revealing the stability of such topological spin textures and the possibility to control them.

2.
Nano Lett ; 18(11): 7118-7123, 2018 11 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30265544

RESUMEN

Atomic resolution imaging of light elements in electron-transparent materials has long been a challenge. Biomolecular materials, for example, are rapidly altered by incident electrons. We demonstrate a scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) technique, called STEM holography, capable of efficient structural analysis of beam-sensitive nanomaterials. STEM holography measures the absolute phase and amplitude of electrons passed through a specimen via interference with a vacuum reference wave. We use an amplitude-dividing nanofabricated grating to prepare multiple beams focused at the sample. We configure the postspecimen microscope imaging system to overlap the beams, forming an interference pattern. We record and analyze the pattern at each 2D-raster-scan-position, reconstructing the complex object wave. As a demonstration, we image gold nanoparticles on an amorphous carbon substrate at 2.4 Å resolution. STEM holography offers higher contrast of the carbon while maintaining gold atomic lattice resolution compared to high angle annular dark field STEM.

3.
Nano Lett ; 18(4): 2683-2688, 2018 04 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29583012

RESUMEN

Quantum emitters in two-dimensional hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) are attractive for a variety of quantum and photonic technologies because they combine ultra-bright, room-temperature single-photon emission with an atomically thin crystal. However, the emitter's prominence is hindered by large, strain-induced wavelength shifts. We report the discovery of a visible-wavelength, single-photon emitter (SPE) in a zero-dimensional boron nitride allotrope (the boron nitride nanococoon, BNNC) that retains the excellent optical characteristics of few-layer hBN while possessing an emission line variation that is lower by a factor of 5 than the hBN emitter. We determined the emission source to be the nanometer-size BNNC through the cross-correlation of optical confocal microscopy with high-resolution scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Altogether, this discovery enlivens color centers in BN materials and, because of the BN nanococoon's size, opens new and exciting opportunities in nanophotonics, quantum information, biological imaging, and nanoscale sensing.

4.
ACS Nano ; 18(28): 18246-18256, 2024 Jul 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38975730

RESUMEN

The realization of above room-temperature ferromagnetism in the two-dimensional (2D) magnet Fe5GeTe2 represents a major advance for the use of van der Waals (vdW) materials in practical spintronic applications. In particular, observations of magnetic skyrmions and related states within exfoliated flakes of this material provide a pathway to the fine-tuning of topological spin textures via 2D material heterostructure engineering. However, there are conflicting reports as to the nature of the magnetic structures in Fe5GeTe2. The matter is further complicated by the study of two types of Fe5GeTe2 crystals with markedly different structural and magnetic properties, distinguished by their specific fabrication procedure: whether they are slowly cooled or rapidly quenched from the growth temperature. In this work, we combine X-ray and electron microscopy to observe the formation of magnetic stripe domains, skyrmion-like type-I, and topologically trivial type-II bubbles, within exfoliated flakes of Fe5GeTe2. The results reveal the influence of the magnetic ordering of the Fe1 sublattice below 150 K, which dramatically alters the magnetocrystalline anisotropy and leads to a complex magnetic phase diagram and a sudden change of the stability of the magnetic textures. In addition, we highlight the significant differences in the magnetic structures intrinsic to slow-cooled and quenched Fe5GeTe2 flakes.

5.
Adv Mater ; 35(12): e2208930, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36637996

RESUMEN

Topological charge plays a significant role in a range of physical systems. In particular, observations of real-space topological objects in magnetic materials have been largely limited to skyrmions - states with a unitary topological charge. Recently, more exotic states with varying topology, such as antiskyrmions, merons, or bimerons and 3D states such as skyrmion strings, chiral bobbers, and hopfions, have been experimentally reported. Along these lines, the realization of states with higher-order topology has the potential to open new avenues of research in topological magnetism and its spintronic applications. Here, real-space imaging of such spin textures, including skyrmion, skyrmionium, skyrmion bag, and skyrmion sack states, observed in exfoliated flakes of the van der Waals magnet Fe3-x GeTe2 (FGT) is reported. These composite skyrmions may emerge from seeded, loop-like states condensed into the stripe domain structure, demonstrating the possibility to realize spin textures with arbitrary integer topological charge within exfoliated flakes of 2D magnets. The general nature of the formation mechanism motivates the search for composite skyrmion states in both well-known and new magnetic materials, which may yet reveal an even richer spectrum of higher-order topological objects.

6.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 5079, 2021 Aug 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34426575

RESUMEN

Thermal-current induced electron and spin dynamics in solids -dubbed "caloritronics"- have generated widespread interest in both fundamental physics and spintronics applications. Here, we examine the dynamics of nanometric topological spin textures, skyrmions driven by a temperature gradient ∇T or heat flow, that are evaluated through in-situ real-space observations in an insulating helimagnet Cu2OSeO3. We observe increases of the skyrmion velocity and the Hall angle with increasing ∇T above a critical value of ~ 13 mK/mm, which is two orders of magnitude lower than the ∇T required to drive ferromagnetic domain walls. A comparable magnitude of ∇T is also observed to move the domain walls between a skyrmion domain and the non-topological conical-spin domain from cold to hot regions. Our results demonstrate the efficient manipulation of skyrmions by temperature gradients, a promising step towards energy-efficient "green" spintronics.

7.
Adv Mater ; 32(46): e2004206, 2020 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33043519

RESUMEN

Much scientific capital has been directed toward exotic magnetic spin textures called Bloch lines, that is, Néel-type line boundaries within domain walls, because their geometry promises high-density magnetic storage. While predicted to arise in high-anisotropy magnets, bulk soft magnets, and thin films with in-plane magnetization, Bloch lines also constitute magnetic antiskyrmions, that is, topological antiparticles of skyrmions. Most domain walls occur as Bloch-type or Néel-type, in which the magnetization rotates parallel or perpendicular to the domain wall across its profile, respectively. The Bloch lines' Néel-type rotation and their minute size make them difficult to directly measure. This work utilizes differential phase contrast (DPC) scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) to measure the in-plane magnetization of Bloch lines within antiskyrmions emergent in a non-centrosymmetric Heusler magnet with D2d symmetry, Mn1.4 Pt0.9 Pd0.1 Sn, in addition to Bloch-type skyrmions in an FeGe magnet with B20-type crystal structure to benchmark the DPC technique. Both in-focus measurement and identification of Bloch lines at the antiskyrmion's corners are provided.

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