Nature Communications (Mar 2024)

Three-dimensional magnetic nanotextures with high-order vorticity in soft magnetic wireframes

  • Oleksii M. Volkov,
  • Oleksandr V. Pylypovskyi,
  • Fabrizio Porrati,
  • Florian Kronast,
  • Jose A. Fernandez-Roldan,
  • Attila Kákay,
  • Alexander Kuprava,
  • Sven Barth,
  • Filipp N. Rybakov,
  • Olle Eriksson,
  • Sebastian Lamb-Camarena,
  • Pavlo Makushko,
  • Mohamad-Assaad Mawass,
  • Shahrukh Shakeel,
  • Oleksandr V. Dobrovolskiy,
  • Michael Huth,
  • Denys Makarov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46403-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Additive nanotechnology enable curvilinear and three-dimensional (3D) magnetic architectures with tunable topology and functionalities surpassing their planar counterparts. Here, we experimentally reveal that 3D soft magnetic wireframe structures resemble compact manifolds and accommodate magnetic textures of high order vorticity determined by the Euler characteristic, χ. We demonstrate that self-standing magnetic tetrapods (homeomorphic to a sphere; χ = + 2) support six surface topological solitons, namely four vortices and two antivortices, with a total vorticity of + 2 equal to its Euler characteristic. Alternatively, wireframe structures with one loop (homeomorphic to a torus; χ = 0) possess equal number of vortices and antivortices, which is relevant for spin-wave splitters and 3D magnonics. Subsequent introduction of n holes into the wireframe geometry (homeomorphic to an n-torus; χ < 0) enables the accommodation of a virtually unlimited number of antivortices, which suggests their usefulness for non-conventional (e.g., reservoir) computation. Furthermore, complex stray-field topologies around these objects are of interest for superconducting electronics, particle trapping and biomedical applications.