Spinning skyrmions show way to new electronics
A fundamental study on the movement of skyrmions, very small and very stable objects that can occur in certain thin crystals, may help to build smaller and more energy efficient electronic devices, such as memory storage. University of Groningen theoretical physicist Maxim Mostovoy was part of the team that solved the riddle of the spinning skyrmion. The results were published on Sunday 26 January in Nature Materials.
A skyrmion is a complex magnetic configuration, which roughly resembles a vortex. It can be visualized as a round object where the magnetic moment on the outer rim is in the opposite direction to the magnetic moment in the centre. Between rim and centre there are concentric rings in which magnetization is rotating from up to down.
‘Skyrmions are very stable structures which can measure from a few nanometres up to a micrometre in diameter’, explains Mostovoy. ‘And scientists have been looking for ways to use them in information storage and other electronic devices.’
Unidirectional
Several years ago, a team of Japanese scientists investigated skyrmions using an electron beam. They noticed the structures began to rotate through the material in which they were embedded. The movement was unidirectional, always clockwise. Mostovoy got involved as a theoretician to explain this movement.
It was ruled out that the electrons caused the movement, as it also occurred in insulating materials. This suggested a thermal effect, as the electron beam heats the material and creates a temperature gradient between the centre spot and the periphery. ‘And a more intense beam made the skyrmions move faster.’
Stadium wave
Different theoretical models were proposed to explain the movement, and tested in computer simulations. It took for Mostovoy and his colleagues several years to solve the riddle. What they concluded is that the movement is driven by the heat as it moves from the centre outwards in the form of a ‘spin wave’.
This spin wave (also called magnon current) is in a sense similar to the ‘wave’ seen in sports stadiums. Spin is a quantum-mechanical phenomenon of particles that defines their angular momentum and has two states: up or down. This spin can be flipped. Each particle in the material responds to such a flip by their neighbour by mimicking it, just as a spectator in a stadium will rise during a wave when his neighbour rises. Next, the spins flip back, like the spectators who sit down once the wave has passed.
Spintronics
‘When a spin wave reaches a skyrmion, it bounces off’, explains Mostovoy. ‘And it always bounces off in one direction. The impact will send the skyrmion off in the opposite direction.’ What is special about this collision is that it is a quantum mechanical phenomenon (the spin wave) which sets a macroscopic ‘real world’ object, the skyrmion, in motion.
‘As a result of this study, we now know how we can move skyrmions’, says Mostovoy. ‘This was possible before, but only by using a current. Our method, using a spin wave, is more energy efficient.’ This is good news for scientists working on ‘spintronics’, electronic devices that depend on the spin of particles, rather than the charge of electrons (as in ordinary electronic devices).
Influential fundamental scientist
Mostovoy is not involved in making such devices, though. ‘My drive is to understand the properties of matter on a fundamental level. Everything we see is made of matter. But how does matter self-organize? There are endless possibilities, and I want to understand how matter works.’ However, Mostovoy is affiliated with the Zernike Institute of Advanced Materials at the University of Groningen, where many of his colleagues are trying to put this sort of fundamental knowledge to use.
The current publication is the third Nature Materials paper to which Mostovoy has contributed in the last 4 months. In 2012, Mostovoy was ranked as one of the ten most influential Dutch scientists, based on citations, by the Centre for Science and Technology Studies (Leiden University).
Curriculum vitae
Maxim Mostovoy (1963) was born in Russia but now has Dutch nationality. He studied nuclear physics at Novosibirsk State University and gained a PhD in 1998 at the University of Groningen. From 1895-1998 he was a researcher at the Budker Institute in Novosibirsk. From 1998-2004 he was a postdoc researcher at the University of Groningen, and then visiting scientist for a year at the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in Stuttgart, Germany. He then returned to Groningen and was appointed professor in 2010. He is affiliated to the Zernike Institute of Advanced Materials (ZIAM) of the University of Groningen. (source: ScienceLinx)
Note for the press
- Reference: Thermally driven ratchet motion of a skyrmion microcrystal and topological magnon Hall effect M. Mochizuki1,2*, X. Z. Yu3, S. Seki2,3,4, N. Kanazawa5,W. Koshibae3, J. Zang6, M. Mostovoy7, Y. Tokura3,4,5 and N. Nagaosa3,4,5
1Department of Physics and Mathematics, Aoyama Gakuin University, Sagamihara, Kanagawa 229-8558, Japan, 2PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan, 3RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science (CEMS),Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan, 4Department of Applied Physics, Quantum-Phase Electronics Center, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku Tokyo 113-8656, Japan, 5Department of Applied Physics, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8656, Japan, 6Department of Physics and Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA, 7Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials, University of Groningen, Nijenborgh 4, 9747 AG, Groningen, The Netherlands.
- The article was published on 26 January 2014 at Nature Materials .
- For more information: Prof. M.V. Mostovoy, m.mostovoy@rug.nl, tel. 050-363 3419.
Last modified: | 14 September 2021 12.41 p.m. |
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