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Atomic-scale observations of a specific local area would be considerably beneficial when exploring new fundamental materials and devices. The development of hardware-type aberration correction1,2 in electron microscopy has enabled local structural observations with atomic resolution3-5 as well as chemical and vibration analysis6-8. In magnetic imaging, however, atomic-level spin configurations are analysed by electron energy-loss spectroscopy by placing samples in strong magnetic fields9-11, which destroy the nature of the magnetic ordering in the samples. Although magnetic-field-free observations can visualize the intrinsic magnetic fields of an antiferromagnet by unit-cell averaging12, directly observing the magnetic field of an individual atomic layer of a non-uniform structure is challenging. Here we report that the magnetic fields of an individual lattice plane inside materials with a non-uniform structure can be observed under magnetic-field-free conditions by electron holography with a hardware-type aberration corrector assisted by post-digital aberration correction. The magnetic phases of the net magnetic moments of (111) lattice planes formed by opposite spin orderings between Fe3+ and Mo5+ in a ferrimagnetic double-perovskite oxide (Ba2FeMoO6) were successfully observed. This result opens the door to direct observations of the magnetic lattice in local areas, such as interfaces and grain boundaries, in many materials and devices.
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The manipulation and control of electron spins, the fundamental building blocks of magnetic domains and spin textures, are at the core of spintronics. Of particular interest is the effect of the electric current on topological magnetic skyrmions, such as the current-induced deformation of isolated skyrmions. The deformation has consequences ranging from perturbed dynamics to modified packing configurations. In this study, we measured the current-driven real-space deformation of isolated, pinned skyrmions within Co10Zn10 at room temperature. We observed that the skyrmions are surprisingly soft, readily deforming during electric current application into an elliptical shape with a well-defined deformation axis (semimajor axis). We found that this axis rotates unidirectionally toward the current direction irrespective of electric current polarity and that the elliptical deformation reverses back upon current termination. We quantified the average distortion δ, which increased by â¼90% during the largest applied current density |j| = 8.46 ×109 A/m2 when compared with the skyrmion's intrinsic shape ([Formula: see text]). Additionally, we demonstrated an approximately 120% average skyrmion core size expansion during current application, highlighting the skyrmions' inherent topological protection. This evaluation of in situ electric current-induced skyrmion deformation paints a clearer picture of spin-polarized electron-skyrmion interactions and may prove essential in designing spintronic devices.
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The concept of topology has dramatically expanded the research landscape of magnetism, leading to the discovery of numerous magnetic textures with intriguing topological properties. A magnetic skyrmion is an emergent topological magnetic texture with a string-like structure in three dimensions and a disk-like structure in one and two dimensions. Skyrmions in zero dimensions have remained elusive due to challenges from many competing orders. Here, by combining electron holography and micromagnetic simulations, we uncover the real-space magnetic configurations of a skyrmionic vortex structure confined in a B20-type FeGe tetrahedral nanoparticle. An isolated skyrmionic vortex forms at the ground state and this texture shows excellent robustness against temperature without applying a magnetic field. Our findings shed light on zero-dimensional geometrical confinement as a route to engineer and manipulate individual skyrmionic metastructures.
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NanopartículasRESUMO
Nanometric topological spin textures, such as skyrmions (Sks) and antiskyrmions (antiSks), have attracted much attention recently. However, most studies have focused on two-dimensional spin textures in films with inherent or synthetic antisymmetric spin-exchange interaction, termed Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, although three-dimensional (3D) topological spin textures, such as antiSks composed of alternating Bloch- and Néel-type spin spirals, chiral bobbers carrying emergent magnetic monopoles, and deformed Sk strings, are ubiquitous. To elucidate these textures, we have developed a 3D nanometric magnetic imaging technique, tomographic Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The approach enables the visualization of the 3D shape of magnetic objects and their 3D vector field mapping. Here we report 3D vector field maps of deformed Sk-strings and antiSk using the technique. This research approach will lead to discoveries and understanding of fertile 3D magnetic structures in a broad class of magnets, providing insight into 3D topological magnetism.
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Imageamento Tridimensional , Imãs , Microscopia Eletrônica de TransmissãoRESUMO
Topological spin textures have attracted much attention both for fundamental physics and spintronics applications. Among them, antiskyrmions possess a unique spin configuration with Bloch-type and Néel-type domain walls owing to anisotropic Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in the non-centrosymmetric crystal structure. However, antiskyrmions have thus far only been observed in a few Heusler compounds with D2d symmetry. Here we report a new material, Fe1.9Ni0.9Pd0.2P, in a different symmetry class (S4), in which antiskyrmions exist over a wide temperature range that includes room temperature, and transform into skyrmions on changing magnetic field and lamella thickness. The periodicity of magnetic textures greatly depends on the crystal thickness, and domains with anisotropic sawtooth fractals were observed at the surface of thick crystals and attributed to the interplay between the dipolar interaction and the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction as governed by crystal symmetry. Our findings provide an arena in which to study antiskyrmions, and should stimulate further research on topological spin textures and their applications.
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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.
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This study aimed to investigate the application effect of tirofiban on percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and its postoperative effect on C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 16 (CXCL16) level and myocardial perfusion. A total of 50 cases of patients diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome and treated in Sunshine Union Hospital (Weifang, China) were included in group A and 30 cases of healthy subjects underwent physical examination in our hospital during the same period were enrolled in group B. Tirofiban was used in group A patients during PCI. Clinical efficacy evaluation criteria were used to evaluate the efficacy after treatment. The level of CXCL16 in serum before and after treatment was detected by qRT-PCR. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was drawn to analyze the value of C-X-C Motif Chemokine Ligand in diagnosing ACS. Before treatment, CXCL16 level in group A was significantly higher than that in group B (p<0.001). After treatment, patients in TMPG grade 3 in group A were significantly increased (p<0.001). Tirofiban could improve myocardial perfusion in patients with ACS after PCI, reduce adverse events and CXCL16 levels. Serum CXCL16 is expected to be a potential diagnostic and therapeutic predictor of ACS.
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Síndrome Coronariana Aguda/terapia , Intervenção Coronária Percutânea/métodos , Inibidores da Agregação Plaquetária/uso terapêutico , Tirofibana/uso terapêutico , Síndrome Coronariana Aguda/diagnóstico , Síndrome Coronariana Aguda/metabolismo , Idoso , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Quimiocina CXCL16/metabolismo , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Resultado do TratamentoRESUMO
Magnetic skyrmions in Co8Zn8Mn4 thin plates are observed to deform in a metastable state prepared in a magnetic-field-cooling process by way of the thermal-equilibrium skyrmion phase. In cooling, the disk-shape skyrmions change to bar- or L-shaped elongated form, whereas the skyrmion density is nearly conserved. The deformation of the skyrmions in the supercooled metastable phase is observed irrespective of the crystallographic orientation of the thin plate, whereas the elongation direction nearly aligns along the magnetic easy axis. It is proposed that the deformation should be induced by a large increase in magnetic modulation wavenumber when decreasing the temperature, whereas the topological protection of the skyrmions keeps the averaged skyrmion density constant.
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Three-dimensional forms of skyrmion aggregate, such as a cubic lattice of skyrmions, are anticipated to exist, yet their direct observations remain elusive. Here, we report real-space observations of spin configurations of the skyrmion-antiskyrmion cubic-lattice in MnGe with a very short period (â¼3 nm) and hence endowed with the largest skyrmion number density. The skyrmion lattices parallel to the {100} atomic lattices are directly observed using high-resolution Lorentz transmission electron microscopes, simultaneously with underlying atomic-lattice fringes.
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It was recently realized that topological spin textures do not merely have mathematical beauty but can also give rise to unique functionalities of magnetic materials. An example is the skyrmion--a nano-sized bundle of noncoplanar spins--that by virtue of its nontrivial topology acts as a flux of magnetic field on spin-polarized electrons. Lorentz transmission electron microscopy recently emerged as a powerful tool for direct visualization of skyrmions in noncentrosymmetric helimagnets. Topologically, skyrmions are equivalent to magnetic bubbles (cylindrical domains) in ferromagnetic thin films, which were extensively explored in the 1970s for data storage applications. In this study we use Lorentz microscopy to image magnetic domain patterns in the prototypical magnetic oxide-M-type hexaferrite with a hint of scandium. Surprisingly, we find that the magnetic bubbles and stripes in the hexaferrite have a much more complex structure than the skyrmions and spirals in helimagnets, which we associate with the new degree of freedom--helicity (or vector spin chirality) describing the direction of spin rotation across the domain walls. We observe numerous random reversals of helicity in the stripe domain state. Random helicity of cylindrical domain walls coexists with the positional order of magnetic bubbles in a triangular lattice. Most unexpectedly, we observe regular helicity reversals inside skyrmions with an unusual multiple-ring structure.
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Elétrons , Magnetismo , Modelos Químicos , Nanoestruturas/química , Compostos de Bário , Compostos Férricos , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão , Nanoestruturas/ultraestrutura , Escândio/químicaRESUMO
We report here the real-space observation of skyrmions and helical magnetic domains in a MnSi nanowire (NW) using Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (LTEM). The MnSi NW was thinned to a rectangular cross-section by focused-ion beam milling to reduce obstructive Fresnel fringes. Helimagnetic domains, imaged as alternating bright and dark contrast stripes with an 18 nm period, were observed to be the spontaneous magnetic ground state at 6 K, while the hexagonal skyrmion lattice (SkX) with a domain diameter of 18 nm was observed under a normal magnetic field of 210 mT. Temperature-dependent measurements reveal that the SkX is stable over a larger range in this NW system (6-35 K) compared to the narrow temperature regime of skyrmion phase in bulk MnSi (26-30 K) and thin films of MnSi (5-23 K).
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The spontaneous formation and topological transitions of vortex-antivortex pairs have implications for a broad range of emergent phenomena, for example, from superconductivity to quantum computing. Unlike magnets exhibiting collinear spin textures, helimagnets with noncollinear spin textures provide unique opportunities to manipulate topological forms such as (anti)merons and (anti)skyrmions. However, it is challenging to achieve multiple topological states and their interconversion in a single helimagnet due to the topological protection for each state. Here, the on-demand creation of multiple topological states in a helimagnet Fe0.5 Co0.5 Ge, including a spontaneous vortex pair of meron with topological charge N = -1/2 and antimeron with N = 1/2, and a vortex-antivortex bundle, that is, a bimeron (meron pair) with N = -1 is reported. The mutual transformation between skyrmions and bimerons with respect to the competitive effects of magnetic field and magnetic shape anisotropy is demonstrated. It is shown that electric currents drive the individual bimerons to form their connecting assembly and then into a skyrmion lattice. These findings signify the feasibility of designing topological states and offer new insights into the manipulation of noncollinear spin textures for potential applications in various fields.
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Current-driven dynamics of topological spin textures, such as skyrmions and antiskyrmions, have garnered considerable attention in condensed matter physics and spintronics. As compared with skyrmions, the current-driven dynamics of their antiparticles - antiskyrmions - remain less explored due to the increased complexity of antiskyrmions. Here, we design and employ fabricated microdevices of a prototypical antiskyrmion host, (Fe0.63Ni0.3Pd0.07)3P, to allow in situ current application with Lorentz transmission electron microscopy observations. The experimental results and related micromagnetic simulations demonstrate current-driven antiskyrmion dynamics confined within stripe domains. Under nanosecond-long current pulses, antiskyrmions exhibit directional motion along the stripe regardless of the current direction, while the antiskyrmion velocity is linearly proportional to the current density. Significantly, the antiskyrmion mobility could be enhanced when the current flow is perpendicular to the stripe direction. Our findings provide novel and reliable insights on dynamical antiskyrmions and their potential implications on spintronics.
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In helimagnetic metals, ac current-driven spin motions can generate emergent electric fields acting on conduction electrons, leading to emergent electromagnetic induction (EEMI). Recent experiments reveal the EEMI signal generally shows a strongly current-nonlinear response. In this study, we investigate the EEMI of Tb5Sb3, a short-period helimagnet. Using small angle neutron scattering we show that Tb5Sb3 hosts highly disordered helimagnetism with a distribution of spin-helix periodicity. The current-nonlinear dynamics of the disordered spin helix in Tb5Sb3 indeed shows up as the nonlinear electrical resistivity (real part of ac resistivity), and even more clearly as a nonlinear and huge EEMI (imaginary part of ac resistivity) response. The magnitude of the EEMI reaches as large as several tens of µH for Tb5Sb3 devices on the scale of several tens of µm, originating to noncollinear spin textures possibly even without long-range helimagnetic order.
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Topological magnetic (anti)skyrmions are robust string-like objects heralded as potential components in next-generation topological spintronics devices due to their low-energy manipulability via stimuli such as magnetic fields, heat, and electric/thermal current. While these 2D topological objects are widely studied, intrinsically 3D electron-spin real-space topology remains less explored despite its prevalence in bulky magnets. 2D-imaging studies reveal peculiar vortex-like contrast in the core regions of spin textures present in antiskyrmion-hosting thin plate magnets with S4 crystal symmetry, suggesting a more complex 3D real-space structure than the 2D model suggests. Here, holographic vector field electron tomography captures the 3D structure of antiskyrmions in a single-crystal, precision-doped (Fe0.63Ni0.3Pd0.07)3P (FNPP) lamellae at room temperature and zero field. These measurements reveal hybrid string-like solitons composed of skyrmions with topological number W = -1 on the lamellae's surfaces and an antiskyrmion (W = + 1) connecting them. High-resolution images uncover a Bloch point quadrupole (four magnetic (anti)monopoles that are undetectable in 2D imaging) which enables the observed lengthwise topological transitions. Numerical calculations corroborate the stability of hybrid strings over their conventional (anti)skyrmion counterparts. Hybrid strings result in topological tuning, a tunable topological Hall effect, and the suppression of skyrmion Hall motion, disrupting existing paradigms within spintronics.
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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.
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Observing and characterizing the spin distributions on a nanometer scale are of vital importance for understanding nanomagnetism and its application to spintronics. The magnetic structure in MnSi thin samples prepared from a bulk, which undergoes a transition from a helix to a skyrmion lattice, was investigated by in situ observation using Lorentz microscopy. Stripe domains were observed at zero applied field below 22.5 K. A skyrmion lattice with 6-fold symmetry in real space appeared when a field of 0.18 T was applied normal to the film plane. The lattice constant was estimated to be 18 nm, almost identical to the helical period. In comparison with the marginally stable skyrmion phase in a bulk sample, the skyrmion phase was stable over a wide range of temperatures and magnetic fields in the thin samples.
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Imãs , Manganês/química , Nanoestruturas/química , Nanoestruturas/ultraestrutura , Compostos de Silício/química , Desenho de Equipamento , Análise de Falha de Equipamento , Campos Magnéticos , Teste de Materiais , Tamanho da PartículaRESUMO
3D topological spin textures-hopfions-are predicted in helimagnetic systems but are not experimentally confirmed thus far. By utilizing an external magnetic field and electric current in the present study, 3D topological spin textures are realized, including fractional hopfions with nonzero topological index, in a skyrmion-hosting helimagnet FeGe. Microsecond current pulses are employed to control the dynamics of the expansion and contraction of a bundle composed of a skyrmion and a fractional hopfion, as well as its current-driven Hall motion. This research approach has demonstrated the novel electromagnetic properties of fractional hopfions and their ensembles in helimagnetic systems.
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The use of magnetic states in memory devices has a history dating back decades, and the experimental discovery of magnetic skyrmions and subsequent demonstrations of their control via magnetic fields, heat, and electric/thermal currents have ushered in a new era for spintronics research and development. Recent studies have experimentally discovered the antiskyrmion, the skyrmion's antiparticle, and while several host materials have been identified, control via thermal current remains elusive. In this work, we use thermal current to drive the transformation between skyrmions, antiskyrmions and non-topological bubbles, as well as the switching of helical states in the antiskyrmion-hosting ferromagnet (Fe0.63Ni0.3Pd0.07)3P at room temperature. We discover that a temperature gradient [Formula: see text] drives a transformation from antiskyrmions to non-topological bubbles to skyrmions while under a magnetic field and observe the opposite, unidirectional transformation from skyrmions to antiskyrmions at zero-field, suggesting that the antiskyrmion, more so than the skyrmion, is robustly metastable at zero field.
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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.