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Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires

We present a Lorentz microscopy study of polycrystalline permalloy 2D nanostructures with a thickness of 20 nm. Each structure was designed as a single domain wall trap. The trap comprises two horizontal nanowires with an in-plane dimension of 200 × 1000 nm(2), and three tilted pads with different s...

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Autores principales: Ho, L. D. Anh, Tran, Minh-Tung, Cao, Xuan-Huu, Dao, Vinh-Ai, Ngo, Duc-The, Hoang, Duc-Quang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9079939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35540750
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra01597j
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author Ho, L. D. Anh
Tran, Minh-Tung
Cao, Xuan-Huu
Dao, Vinh-Ai
Ngo, Duc-The
Hoang, Duc-Quang
author_facet Ho, L. D. Anh
Tran, Minh-Tung
Cao, Xuan-Huu
Dao, Vinh-Ai
Ngo, Duc-The
Hoang, Duc-Quang
author_sort Ho, L. D. Anh
collection PubMed
description We present a Lorentz microscopy study of polycrystalline permalloy 2D nanostructures with a thickness of 20 nm. Each structure was designed as a single domain wall trap. The trap comprises two horizontal nanowires with an in-plane dimension of 200 × 1000 nm(2), and three tilted pads with different shapes. These structures allow us to create head-to-head domain walls, and these created walls can propagate in the structures by an external magnetic field. These designed traps were simulated using the micro-magnetic OOMMF simulation software. Those nanostructures were also patterned using electron beam lithography and focussed-ion beam techniques. This aims to determine the geometric parameters required to propagate a single magnetic domain wall in these structures reproducibly. Among the studied structures with one and two field directions, we found that the motion of a domain wall can be reproducibly driven by two alternative field directions in a trap which consists of the two horizontal nanowires and three 90°-tilted ones. We investigated systematically the viability of both single field and sequential switching of two field directions. Lorentz microscopy and micro-magnetic simulation results indicate that the propagation of a domain wall is strongly affected by the precise shape of the corner sections linking the trap elements, and the angles of the horizontal nanowires and tilted pads. Domain wall pinning and transformation of wall chirality are strongly correlated to the trap geometries. Our results are vital to design an optimal trap which supports a reproducible domain wall motion. This might also support a greater understanding of domain wall creation and propagation in magnetic nanowires which are of interest for concepts of high-density and ultrafast nonvolatile data storage devices, including racetrack memory and magnetic logic gates.
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spelling pubmed-90799392022-05-09 Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires Ho, L. D. Anh Tran, Minh-Tung Cao, Xuan-Huu Dao, Vinh-Ai Ngo, Duc-The Hoang, Duc-Quang RSC Adv Chemistry We present a Lorentz microscopy study of polycrystalline permalloy 2D nanostructures with a thickness of 20 nm. Each structure was designed as a single domain wall trap. The trap comprises two horizontal nanowires with an in-plane dimension of 200 × 1000 nm(2), and three tilted pads with different shapes. These structures allow us to create head-to-head domain walls, and these created walls can propagate in the structures by an external magnetic field. These designed traps were simulated using the micro-magnetic OOMMF simulation software. Those nanostructures were also patterned using electron beam lithography and focussed-ion beam techniques. This aims to determine the geometric parameters required to propagate a single magnetic domain wall in these structures reproducibly. Among the studied structures with one and two field directions, we found that the motion of a domain wall can be reproducibly driven by two alternative field directions in a trap which consists of the two horizontal nanowires and three 90°-tilted ones. We investigated systematically the viability of both single field and sequential switching of two field directions. Lorentz microscopy and micro-magnetic simulation results indicate that the propagation of a domain wall is strongly affected by the precise shape of the corner sections linking the trap elements, and the angles of the horizontal nanowires and tilted pads. Domain wall pinning and transformation of wall chirality are strongly correlated to the trap geometries. Our results are vital to design an optimal trap which supports a reproducible domain wall motion. This might also support a greater understanding of domain wall creation and propagation in magnetic nanowires which are of interest for concepts of high-density and ultrafast nonvolatile data storage devices, including racetrack memory and magnetic logic gates. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-04-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9079939/ /pubmed/35540750 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra01597j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Ho, L. D. Anh
Tran, Minh-Tung
Cao, Xuan-Huu
Dao, Vinh-Ai
Ngo, Duc-The
Hoang, Duc-Quang
Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
title Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
title_full Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
title_fullStr Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
title_full_unstemmed Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
title_short Field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
title_sort field-driven single domain wall motion in ferromagnetic nanowires
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9079939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35540750
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra01597j
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