Scientific Reports (May 2017)

Synthetic ferrimagnet nanowires with very low critical current density for coupled domain wall motion

  • Serban Lepadatu,
  • Henri Saarikoski,
  • Robert Beacham,
  • Maria Jose Benitez,
  • Thomas A. Moore,
  • Gavin Burnell,
  • Satoshi Sugimoto,
  • Daniel Yesudas,
  • May C. Wheeler,
  • Jorge Miguel,
  • Sarnjeet S. Dhesi,
  • Damien McGrouther,
  • Stephen McVitie,
  • Gen Tatara,
  • Christopher H. Marrows

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01748-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Domain walls in ferromagnetic nanowires are potential building-blocks of future technologies such as racetrack memories, in which data encoded in the domain walls are transported using spin-polarised currents. However, the development of energy-efficient devices has been hampered by the high current densities needed to initiate domain wall motion. We show here that a remarkable reduction in the critical current density can be achieved for in-plane magnetised coupled domain walls in CoFe/Ru/CoFe synthetic ferrimagnet tracks. The antiferromagnetic exchange coupling between the layers leads to simple Néel wall structures, imaged using photoemission electron and Lorentz transmission electron microscopy, with a width of only ~100 nm. The measured critical current density to set these walls in motion, detected using magnetotransport measurements, is 1.0 × 1011 Am−2, almost an order of magnitude lower than in a ferromagnetically coupled control sample. Theoretical modelling indicates that this is due to nonadiabatic driving of anisotropically coupled walls, a mechanism that can be used to design efficient domain-wall devices.