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Dive into the research topics where A. C. Irvine is active.

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Featured researches published by A. C. Irvine.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

An antidamping spin–orbit torque originating from the Berry curvature

H. Kurebayashi; Jairo Sinova; D. Fang; A. C. Irvine; T. D. Skinner; J. Wunderlich; V. Novák; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; Ek Vehstedt; Liviu P. Zârbo; Karel Výborný; A. J. Ferguson; T. Jungwirth

Magnetization switching at the interface between ferromagnetic and paramagnetic metals, controlled by current-induced torques, could be exploited in magnetic memory technologies. Compelling questions arise regarding the role played in the switching by the spin Hall effect in the paramagnet and by the spin-orbit torque originating from the broken inversion symmetry at the interface. Of particular importance are the antidamping components of these current-induced torques acting against the equilibrium-restoring Gilbert damping of the magnetization dynamics. Here, we report the observation of an antidamping spin-orbit torque that stems from the Berry curvature, in analogy to the origin of the intrinsic spin Hall effect. We chose the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As as a material system because its crystal inversion asymmetry allows us to measure bare ferromagnetic films, rather than ferromagnetic-paramagnetic heterostructures, eliminating by design any spin Hall effect contribution. We provide an intuitive picture of the Berry curvature origin of this antidamping spin-orbit torque as well as its microscopic modelling. We expect the Berry curvature spin-orbit torque to be of comparable strength to the spin-Hall-effect-driven antidamping torque in ferromagnets interfaced with paramagnets with strong intrinsic spin Hall effect.


Nature Materials | 2013

Piezoelectric control of the mobility of a domain wall driven by adiabatic and non-adiabatic torques

E. De Ranieri; P. E. Roy; D. Fang; E. K. Vehsthedt; A. C. Irvine; D. Heiss; A. Casiraghi; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; T. Jungwirth; J. Wunderlich

The rich internal degrees of freedom of magnetic domain walls make them an attractive complement to electron charge for exploring new concepts of storage, transport and processing of information. Here we use the tunable internal structure of a domain wall in a perpendicularly magnetized GaMnAsP/GaAs ferromagnetic semiconductor and demonstrate devices in which piezoelectrically controlled magnetic anisotropy yields up to 500% mobility variations for an electrical-current-driven domain wall. We observe current-induced domain wall motion over a wide range of current-pulse amplitudes and report a direct observation and the piezoelectric control of the Walker breakdown separating two regimes with different mobilities. Our work demonstrates that in spin-orbit-coupled ferromagnets with weak extrinsic domain wall pinning, the piezoelectric control allows one to experimentally assess the upper and lower boundaries of the characteristic ratio of adiabatic and non-adiabatic spin-transfer torques in the current-driven domain wall motion.


Physical Review B | 2015

Electrical manipulation of ferromagnetic NiFe by antiferromagnetic IrMn

Tshitoyan; Chiara Ciccarelli; Ap Mihai; M Ali; A. C. Irvine; Ta Moore; T. Jungwirth; A. J. Ferguson

We demonstrate that an antiferromagnet can be employed for a highly efficient electrical manipulation of a ferromagnet. In our study, we use an electrical detection technique of the ferromagnetic resonance driven by an in-plane ac current in a NiFe/IrMn bilayer. At room temperature, we observe antidampinglike spin torque acting on the NiFe ferromagnet, generated by an in-plane current driven through the IrMn antiferromagnet. A large enhancement of the torque, characterized by an effective spin-Hall angle exceeding most heavy transition metals, correlates with the presence of the exchange-bias field at the NiFe/IrMn interface. It highlights that, in addition to the strong spin-orbit coupling, the antiferromagnetic order in IrMn governs the observed phenomenon.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Spin-orbit torque opposing the Oersted torque in ultrathin Co/Pt bilayers

T. D. Skinner; M. Wang; A. T. Hindmarch; A. W. Rushforth; A. C. Irvine; Dominik Heiss; H. Kurebayashi; A. J. Ferguson

Current-induced torques in ultrathin Co/Pt bilayers were investigated using an electrically driven ferromagnetic resonance technique. The angle dependence of the resonances, detected by a rectification effect as a voltage, was analysed to determine the symmetries and relative magnitudes of the spin-orbit torques. Both anti-damping (Slonczewski) and field-like torques were observed. As the ferromagnet thickness was reduced from 3 to 1u2009nm, the sign of the sum of the field-like torque and Oersted torque reversed. This observation is consistent with the emergence of a Rashba spin orbit torque in ultra-thin bilayers.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Optical spin-transfer-torque-driven domain-wall motion in a ferromagnetic semiconductor

A. J. Ramsay; P. E. Roy; J. A. Haigh; R. M. Otxoa; A. C. Irvine; T. Janda; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; J. Wunderlich

We demonstrate optical manipulation of the position of a domain wall in a dilute magnetic semiconductor, GaMnAsP. Two main contributions are identified. First, photocarrier spin exerts a spin-transfer torque on the magnetization via the exchange interaction. The direction of the domain-wall motion can be controlled using the helicity of the laser. Second, the domain wall is attracted to the hot spot generated by the focused laser. Unlike magnetic-field-driven domain-wall depinning, these mechanisms directly drive domain-wall motion, providing an optical tweezerlike ability to position and locally probe domain walls.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Enhanced inverse spin-Hall effect in ultrathin ferromagnetic/normal metal bilayers

T. D. Skinner; H. Kurebayashi; D. Fang; Dominik Heiss; A. C. Irvine; A. T. Hindmarch; M. Wang; A. W. Rushforth; A. J. Ferguson

We measure electrically detected ferromagnetic resonance in microdevices patterned from ultra-thin Co/Pt bilayers. Spin pumping and rectification voltages are observed and distinguished via their angular dependence. The spin-pumping voltage shows an unexpected increase as the cobalt thickness is reduced below 2 nm. This enhancement allows more efficient conversion of spin to charge current and motivates a theory modelling the dependence of impurity scattering on surface roughness.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Spin gating electrical current

Chiara Ciccarelli; Liviu P. Zârbo; A. C. Irvine; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; J. Wunderlich; T. Jungwirth; A. J. Ferguson

The level of the chemical potential is a fundamental parameter of the electronic structure of a physical system, which consequently plays an important role in defining the properties of active electrical devices. We directly measure the chemical potential shift in the relativistic band structure of the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As, controlled by changes in its magnetic order parameter. Our device comprises a non-magnetic aluminum single electron channel capacitively coupled to the (Ga,Mn)As gate electrode. The chemical potential shifts of the gate are directly read out from the shifts in the Coulomb blockade oscillations of the single electron transistor. The experiments introduce a concept of spin gating electrical current. In our spin transistor spin manipulation is completely removed from the electrical current carrying channel.


Nature Communications | 2017

Inertial displacement of a domain wall excited by ultra-short circularly polarized laser pulses

T. Janda; P. E. Roy; R. Otxoa; Z. Šobáň; A. Ramsay; A. C. Irvine; F. Trojánek; M. Surýnek; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; P. Němec; T. Jungwirth; J. Wunderlich

Domain wall motion driven by ultra-short laser pulses is a pre-requisite for envisaged low-power spintronics combining storage of information in magnetoelectronic devices with high speed and long distance transmission of information encoded in circularly polarized light. Here we demonstrate the conversion of the circular polarization of incident femtosecond laser pulses into inertial displacement of a domain wall in a ferromagnetic semiconductor. In our study, we combine electrical measurements and magneto-optical imaging of the domain wall displacement with micromagnetic simulations. The optical spin-transfer torque acts over a picosecond recombination time of the spin-polarized photo-carriers that only leads to a deformation of the initial domain wall structure. We show that subsequent depinning and micrometre-distance displacement without an applied magnetic field or any other external stimuli can only occur due to the inertia of the domain wall.


Physical Review B | 2015

Efficient conversion of light to charge and spin in Hall-bar microdevices

L. Nádvorník; J. A. Haigh; K. Olejník; A. C. Irvine; V. Novák; T. Jungwirth; J. Wunderlich

We report an experimental demonstration of a local amplification of the spin Hall voltage using an expanding depletion zone at a pn-junction in GaAs/AlGaAs Hall-bar microdevices. It is demonstrated that the depletion zone can be spatially expanded by applying reverse bias by at least 10~


Physical Review B | 2015

Anisotropic magnetocapacitance in ferromagnetic-plate capacitors

J. A. Haigh; Chiara Ciccarelli; A. C. Betz; A. C. Irvine; V. Novák; T. Jungwirth; J. Wunderlich

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R. P. Campion

University of Nottingham

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K. Olejník

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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D. Fang

University of Cambridge

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