4.8 Article

Local and global energy barriers for chiral domain walls in synthetic antiferromagnet-ferromagnet lateral junctions

Journal

NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages 1183-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41565-022-01215-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [670166]
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  3. Samsung Electronics R&D programme 'Material and Device Research on Racetrack Memory'

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This study demonstrates that chiral domain walls in synthetic antiferromagnet-ferromagnet lateral junction have high stability against large magnetic fields and can be efficiently moved across the junction by current. The approach takes advantage of field-induced global energy barriers in the unique energy landscape of the junction to overcome the trade-off between energy efficiency and thermal stability. The research also shows that thermal fluctuations increase the energy barrier and further stabilize the domain wall in the junction at higher temperatures.
Of great promise are synthetic antiferromagnet-based racetrack devices in which chiral composite domain walls can be efficiently moved by current. However, overcoming the trade-off between energy efficiency and thermal stability remains a major challenge. Here we show that chiral domain walls in a synthetic antiferromagnet-ferromagnet lateral junction are highly stable against large magnetic fields, while the domain walls can be efficiently moved across the junction by current. Our approach takes advantage of field-induced global energy barriers in the unique energy landscape of the junction that are added to the local energy barrier. We demonstrate that thermal fluctuations are equivalent to the magnetic field effect, thereby, surprisingly, increasing the energy barrier and further stabilizing the domain wall in the junction at higher temperatures, which is in sharp contrast to ferromagnets or synthetic antiferromagnets. We find that the threshold current density can be further decreased by tilting the junction without affecting the high domain wall stability. Furthermore, we demonstrate that chiral domain walls can be robustly confined within a ferromagnet region sandwiched on both sides by synthetic antiferromagnets and yet can be readily injected into the synthetic antiferromagnet regions by current. Our findings break the aforementioned trade-off, thereby allowing for versatile domain-wall-based memory, and logic, and beyond.

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