Skyrmions in synthetic antiferromagnet nanorings for electrical signal generation
Current-driven magnetic skyrmions show promise as carriers of information bits in racetrack magnetic memory applications. Specifically, the utilization of skyrmions in synthetic antiferromagnetic (SAF) systems is highly attractive due to the potential to suppress the Skyrmion Hall effect, which caus...
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Main Authors | , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
17.05.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Current-driven magnetic skyrmions show promise as carriers of information
bits in racetrack magnetic memory applications. Specifically, the utilization
of skyrmions in synthetic antiferromagnetic (SAF) systems is highly attractive
due to the potential to suppress the Skyrmion Hall effect, which causes a
transverse displacement of driven skyrmions relative to the drift direction. In
this study, we demonstrate, through analytical calculations and micromagnetic
simulations, that in the case of a nanoring geometry, current-driven skyrmions
achieve a stable circular motion with a constant frequency, which is a
prerequisite for a skyrmion-based clock device. Notably, the operational
frequency in a SAF nanoring surpasses that in a bilayer ferromagnetic-heavy
metal nanoring and lies in the GHz regime for current densities of 20 MA/cm^2.
We also find that the performance of skyrmions in SAF nanorings is comparable
to that of radial Neel domain walls for low current densities (approximately 15
MA/cm^2) and low skyrmion densities (Nsk~6). Additionally, we introduce a novel
skyrmionic three-phase AC alternator based on a SAF nanoring, which operates at
frequencies in the GHz regime. Our findings underscore the potential of SAF
nanorings as constituent materials in clock devices with tunable frequencies
operating in the GHz regime |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2405.10819 |