The nature of domain walls in ultrathin ferromagnets revealed by scanning nanomagnetometry

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Abstract

The capacity to propagate magnetic domain walls with spin-polarized currents underpins several schemes for information storage and processing using spintronic devices. A key question involves the internal structure of the domain walls, which governs their response to certain current-driven torques such as the spin Hall effect. Here we show that magnetic microscopy based on a single nitrogen-vacancy defect in diamond can provide a direct determination of the internal wall structure in ultrathin ferromagnetic films under ambient conditions. We find pure Bloch walls in Ta/CoFeB(1nm)/MgO, while left-handed Néel walls are observed in Pt/Co(0.6nm)/AlO x. The latter indicates the presence of a sizable interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, which has strong bearing on the feasibility of exploiting novel chiral states such as skyrmions for information technologies.

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Tetienne, J. P., Hingant, T., Martínez, L. J., Rohart, S., Thiaville, A., Diez, L. H., … Jacques, V. (2015). The nature of domain walls in ultrathin ferromagnets revealed by scanning nanomagnetometry. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7733

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