1. Center for Functional Nanomaterials Seminar

    "Skyrmionics beyond two-dimensions"

    Presented by Jiadong Zang, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of New Hampshire

    Friday, November 15, 2019, 1:30 pm
    CFN, Bldg. 735 1st floor conference room

    Hosted by: Jurek Sadowski

    Chiral magnets are a series of magnets with broken inversion symmetry. A new type of spin interaction therein, the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, stimulates the formation of many novel topological spin textures. One typical example is the emergence of magnetic skyrmion, whose nontrivial topology enables unique dynamical property and thermal stability and gives out promise on future spintronic devices A key transport signature of the skyrmion is the topological Hall effect, that is, the electron moves in sideway under the effect of real space Berry phase induced by spin chirality. In the first part of the talk, after a comprehensive introduction of the skyrmion physics, I will argue that the presence of topological Hall in many experiments is not enough to identify skyrmions. It could originate from atomic scale chirality from thermal fluctuations. In the second part of the talk, I will generalize the skyrmion texture from two dimensions (2D) to three dimensions (3D), and discuss two relevant 3D spin textures in chiral magnets. One is the target skyrmion we recently observed, both theoretically and experimentally, in ultra-small nanodisks of chiral magnets. A target skyrmion consists of concentric helical rings and can be stabilized in the absence of external magnetic field. Switch between two types of target skyrmions can be enabled by a field loop. The other texture to be discussed is the magnetic hopfion. We propose the presence of zero-field hopfion in synthetic chiral magnetic multilayers. The transition from hopfion to the ground state, a monopole-antimonopole pair, can be fully understood as the topological transition between torus and sphere. These works could stimulate the development of 3D spintronics.