自旋电子的新机遇:磁性斯格明子
Materials Science Division, Argonne National 
Laboratory, Argonne, IL 60439, USA
Prof. Axel Hoffmann is senior group leader 
of Magnetic Films Group at Argonne National Laboratory, Materials Science 
Division. Prof. Hoffmann has wide interesting in nanomagnetism, magnetic 
materials and spintronics. In addition, Prof. Hoffmann also services in many 
professional societies, such as Associate Editor of Journal of Applied Physics, 
American Institute of Physics, Member of IEEE Magnetic Society Advisory 
Committee, and American Physical Society.
 
Abstract: The field of 
spintronics, or magnetic electronics, is maturing and giving rise to new 
subfields. An important ingredient to the vitality of magnetism research in 
general is the large complexity due to competitions between interactions 
crossing many lengthscales and the interplay of magnetic degrees of freedom with 
charge (electric currents), phonon (heat), and photons (light). One perfect 
example, of the surprising new concepts being generated in magnetism research is 
the recent discovery of magnetic skyrmions. Magnetic skyrmions are topologically 
distinct spin textures that are stabilized by the interplay between applied 
magnetic fields, magnetic anisotropies, as well as symmetric and antisymmetric 
exchange interactions. Due to their topology magnetic skyrmions can be stable 
with quasi-particle like behavior, where they can be manipulated with very low 
electric currents. This makes them interesting for extreme low-power information 
technologies, where it is envisioned that data will be encoded in topological 
charges, instead of electronic charges as in conventional semiconducting 
devices. Towards the realization of this goal we demonstrated magnetic skyrmions 
in magnetic heterostructures stable at room temperature, which can be 
manipulated using spin Hall effects. Furthermore, using inhomogeneous electric 
charge currents allows the generation of skyrmions in a process that is 
remarkably similar to the droplet formation in surface-tension driven fluid 
flows. However, detailed micromagnetic simulations show that depending on the 
electric current magnitude there are at least two regimes with different 
skyrmion formation mechanisms. Lastly, we demonstrated that the topological 
charge gives rise to a transverse motion on the skyrmions, i.e., the skyrmion 
Hall effect, which is in analogy to the ordinary Hall effect originating from 
the motion of electrically charged particles in the presence of a magnetic 
field.
 
时间:2016 
年 5 月24 
日下午 4:00
地点:yl6809永利官方版物理馆 323 
阶梯教室