Two-dimensional characterization of three-dimensional magnetic bubbles in Fe3Sn2nanostructures

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Abstract

We report differential phase contrast scanning transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of nanoscale magnetic objects in Kagome ferromagnet Fe3Sn2 nanostructures. This technique can directly detect the deflection angle of a focused electron beam, thus allowing clear identification of the real magnetic structures of two magnetic objects including three-ring and complex arch-shaped vortices in Fe3Sn2 by Lorentz-TEM imaging. Numerical calculations based on real material-specific parameters well reproduced the experimental results, showing that the magnetic objects can be attributed to integral magnetizations of two types of complex three-dimensional (3D) magnetic bubbles with depth-modulated spin twisting. Magnetic configurations obtained using the high-resolution TEM are generally considered as two-dimensional (2D) magnetic objects previously. Our results imply the importance of the integral magnetizations of underestimated 3D magnetic structures in 2D TEM magnetic characterizations.

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Tang, J., Wu, Y., Kong, L., Wang, W., Chen, Y., Wang, Y., … Du, H. (2021). Two-dimensional characterization of three-dimensional magnetic bubbles in Fe3Sn2nanostructures. National Science Review, 8(6). https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwaa200

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