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Injection of 360 degree domain walls in magnetic nanostructures via MFM tip

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