Skyrmion stabilization at the domain morphology transition in ferromagnet/heavy metal heterostructures with low exchange stiffness
Jeffrey A. Brock, Eric E. Fullerton

TL;DR
This study demonstrates room-temperature stabilization of micron-scale skyrmions in Pt/Co-based heterostructures with low exchange stiffness, revealing a domain morphology transition driven by energy balance modifications due to low exchange stiffness and iDMI.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence and modeling of skyrmion stabilization linked to domain morphology transition in low exchange stiffness heterostructures, highlighting the role of iDMI.
Findings
Skyrmions stabilized at room temperature in specific heterostructures.
Domain morphology transitions from uniform to stripe phase occur at low exchange stiffness.
Current-induced skyrmion motion and Hall effect observed.
Abstract
We report the experimental observation of micron-scale magnetic skyrmions at room temperature in several Pt/Co-based thin film heterostructures designed to possess a low exchange stiffness, perpendicular magnetic anisotropy, and a modest interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (iDMI). We find both experimentally and by micromagnetic and analytic modeling that the combined action of low exchange stiffness and modest iDMI eliminates the energetic penalty associated with forming domain walls in thin film heterostructures. When the domain wall energy density approaches negative values, the remanent domain morphology transitions from a uniform state to a labyrinthian stripe phase. A low exchange stiffness, indicated by a reduction in the Curie temperature below 400 K, is achieved in Pt/Co, Pt/Co/Ni, and Pt/Co/Ni/Re structures by reducing the Co thickness to the ultrathin limit (< 0.3…
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