J.C. Gartside, D.M. Burn, W.R. Branford and L.F. Cohen
IoP Magnetism Leeds Mar 2015
Domain walls (DWs) in magnetic nanostructures have long been a subject of much interest[1]. The majority of work so far has focused on 90° and 180° DWs. However, recently the field has seen promising developments in 360° DWs, stable topological defects consisting of two strongly-coupled 180° DWs of opposite chirality[2].
360° DWs have several unique properties. They are stationary under applied magnetic fields[3], interact interestingly with spin-waves4 and have a small stray field, desirable for systems such as racetrack memory[4].
Current methods for generating 360° DWs rely on fabricating injection structures and applying rotating fields[5] or current pulses[6]. These techniques have several drawbacks including additional nanofabrication steps and the application of global magnetic fields.
We present a novel method for injecting 360° DWs into nanowires via MFM tip. Experimental evidence is presented from MFM images and supported by micromagnetic simulations (example below). The method avoids fabricating injection structures and global field/current application. Additional benefits include localised injection via precise tip positioning and chirality selection of injected DWs.
Figure 1: Micromagnetic simulation showing 360° DW injection process. An initially homogenous nanowire i) has an MFM tip scanned over it ii)-iii) resulting in a stable 360° DW after the tip has passed iv)
[1] Klaui, M. JOP: Cond. Matt. 20(31), 2008
[2] McMichael, R.D. and Donahue, M.J - IEEE Trans. Mag. 33(5), 1997
[3] Mascaro, M. D. and Ross, C. A. PRB 82(21), 2010
[4] Roy, P.E., Trypiniotis, T. and Barnes, C. H. W. PRB 82(13), 2010
[5] Diegel, M. Mattheis, R. and Halder, E. IEEE Trans. Mag. 40(4), 2004
[6] Oyarce, A. L., Llandro, J. and Barnes, C.H.W. APL 103(22), 2013