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Dive into the research topics where David Cortés-Ortuño is active.

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Featured researches published by David Cortés-Ortuño.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Ground state search, hysteretic behaviour, and reversal mechanism of skyrmionic textures in confined helimagnetic nanostructures

Marijan Beg; Rebecca Carey; Weiwei Wang; David Cortés-Ortuño; Mark Vousden; Marc-Antonio Bisotti; Maximilian Albert; Dmitri Chernyshenko; Ondrej Hovorka; R. L. Stamps; Hans Fangohr

Magnetic skyrmions have the potential to provide solutions for low-power, high-density data storage and processing. One of the major challenges in developing skyrmion-based devices is the skyrmions’ magnetic stability in confined helimagnetic nanostructures. Through a systematic study of equilibrium states, using a full three-dimensional micromagnetic model including demagnetisation effects, we demonstrate that skyrmionic textures are the lowest energy states in helimagnetic thin film nanostructures at zero external magnetic field and in absence of magnetocrystalline anisotropy. We also report the regions of metastability for non-ground state equilibrium configurations. We show that bistable skyrmionic textures undergo hysteretic behaviour between two energetically equivalent skyrmionic states with different core orientation, even in absence of both magnetocrystalline and demagnetisation-based shape anisotropies, suggesting the existence of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya-based shape anisotropy. Finally, we show that the skyrmionic texture core reversal dynamics is facilitated by the Bloch point occurrence and propagation.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Magnon-driven domain-wall motion with the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction

Weiwei Wang; Maximilian Albert; Marijan Beg; Marc-Antonio Bisotti; Dmitri Chernyshenko; David Cortés-Ortuño; Ian Hawke; Hans Fangohr

We study domain-wall (DW) motion induced by spin waves (magnons) in the presence of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI). The DMI exerts a torque on the DW when spin waves pass through the DW, and this torque represents a linear momentum exchange between the spin wave and the DW. Unlike angular momentum exchange between the DW and spin waves, linear momentum exchange leads to a rotation of the DW plane rather than a linear motion. In the presence of an effective easy plane anisotropy, this DMI induced linear momentum transfer mechanism is significantly more efficient than angular momentum transfer in moving the DW.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Thermal stability and topological protection of skyrmions in nanotracks

David Cortés-Ortuño; Weiwei Wang; Marijan Beg; Ryan A. Pepper; Marc-Antonio Bisotti; Rebecca Carey; Mark Vousden; Thomas Kluyver; Ondrej Hovorka; Hans Fangohr

Magnetic skyrmions are hailed as a potential technology for data storage and other data processing devices. However, their stability against thermal fluctuations is an open question that must be answered before skyrmion-based devices can be designed. In this work, we study paths in the energy landscape via which the transition between the skyrmion and the uniform state can occur in interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya finite-sized systems. We find three mechanisms the system can take in the process of skyrmion nucleation or destruction and identify that the transition facilitated by the boundary has a significantly lower energy barrier than the other energy paths. This clearly demonstrates the lack of the skyrmion topological protection in finite-sized magnetic systems. Overall, the energy barriers of the system under investigation are too small for storage applications at room temperature, but research into device materials, geometry and design may be able to address this.


Physical Review B | 2017

Dynamics of skyrmionic states in confined helimagnetic nanostructures

Marijan Beg; Maximilian Albert; Marc-Antonio Bisotti; David Cortés-Ortuño; Weiwei Wang; Rebecca Carey; Mark Vousden; Ondrej Hovorka; Chiara Ciccarelli; Charles S. Spencer; C. H. Marrows; Hans Fangohr

In confined helimagnetic nanostructures, skyrmionic states in the form of incomplete and isolated skyrmion states can emerge as the ground state in absence of both external magnetic field and magnetocrystalline anisotropy. In this work, we study the dynamic properties (resonance frequencies and corresponding eigenmodes) of skyrmionic states in thin film FeGe disk samples. We employ two different methods in finite-element based micromagnetic simulation: eigenvalue and ringdown method. The eigenvalue method allows us to identify all resonance frequencies and corresponding eigenmodes that can exist in the simulated system. However, using a particular experimentally feasible excitation can excite only a limited set of eigenmodes. Because of that, we perform ringdown simulations that resemble the experimental setup using both in-plane and out-of-plane excitations. In addition, we report the nonlinear dependence of resonance frequencies on the external magnetic bias field and disk sample diameter and discuss the possible reversal mode of skyrmionic states. We compare the power spectral densities of incomplete skyrmion and isolated skyrmion states and observe several key differences that can contribute to the experimental identification of the state present in the sample. We measure the FeGe Gilbert damping, and using its value we determine what eigenmodes can be expected to be observed in experiments. Finally, we show that neglecting the demagnetisation energy contribution or ignoring the magnetisation variation in the out-of-film direction -- although not changing the eigenmodes magnetisation dynamics significantly -- changes their resonance frequencies substantially. Apart from contributing to the understanding of skyrmionic states physics, this systematic work can be used as a guide for the experimental identification of skyrmionic states in confined helimagnetic nanostructures.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Skyrmions in thin films with easy-plane magnetocrystalline anisotropy

Mark Vousden; Maximilian Albert; Marijan Beg; Marc-Antonio Bisotti; Rebecca Carey; Dmitri Chernyshenko; David Cortés-Ortuño; Weiwei Wang; Ondrej Hovorka; C. H. Marrows; Hans Fangohr

We demonstrate that chiral skyrmionic magnetization configurations can be found as the minimum energy state in B20 thin film materials with easy-plane magnetocrystalline anisotropy with an applied magnetic field perpendicular to the film plane. Our observations contradict results from prior analytical work, but are compatible with recent experimental investigations. The size of the observed skyrmions increases with the easy-plane magnetocrystalline anisotropy. We use a full micromagnetic model including demagnetization and a three-dimensional geometry to find local energy minimum (metastable) magnetization configurations using numerical damped time integration. We explore the phase space of the system and start simulations from a variety of initial magnetization configurations to present a systematic overview of anisotropy and magnetic field parameters for which skyrmions are metastable and global energy minimum (stable) states.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Hysteresis of nanocylinders with Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction

Rebecca Carey; Marijan Beg; Maximilian Albert; Marc-Antonio Bisotti; David Cortés-Ortuño; Mark Vousden; Weiwei Wang; Ondrej Hovorka; Hans Fangohr

The potential for application of magnetic skyrmions in high density storage devices provides a strong drive to investigate and exploit their stability and manipulability. Through a three-dimensional micromagnetic hysteresis study, we investigate the question of existence of skyrmions in cylindrical nanostructures of variable thickness. We quantify the applied field and thickness dependence of skyrmion states and show that these states can be accessed through relevant practical hysteresis loop measurement protocols. As skyrmionic states have yet to be observed experimentally in confined helimagnetic geometries, our work opens prospects for developing viable hysteresis process-based methodologies to access and observe skyrmionic states.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2018

Skyrmion states in thin confined polygonal nanostructures

Ryan A. Pepper; Marijan Beg; David Cortés-Ortuño; Thomas Kluyver; Marc Antonio Bisotti; Rebecca Carey; Mark Vousden; Maximilian Albert; Weiwei Wang; Ondrej Hovorka; Hans Fangohr

Recent studies have demonstrated that skyrmionic states can be the ground state in thin-film FeGe disk nanostructures in the absence of a stabilising applied magnetic field. In this work, we advance this understanding by investigating to what extent this stabilisation of skyrmionic structures through confinement exists in geometries that do not match the cylindrical symmetry of the skyrmion -- such as as squares and triangles. Using simulation, we show that skyrmionic states can form the ground state for a range of system sizes in both triangular and square-shaped FeGe nanostructures of


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Oersted field assisted magnetization reversal in cylindrical core-shell nanostructures

J. A. Otálora; David Cortés-Ortuño; Detlef Görlitz; Kornelius Nielsch; P. Landeros

10\,\text{nm}


Archive | 2016

Test System For Nudged Elastic Band Method In Nanoscale Magnetism

David Cortés-Ortuño; Hans Fangohr

thickness in the absence of an applied field. We further provide data to assist in the experimental verification of our prediction; to imitate an experiment where the system is saturated with a strong applied field before the field is removed, we compute the time evolution and show the final equilibrium configuration of magnetization fields, starting from a uniform alignment.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2018

Unconventional Spin-Wave Phenomena Induced by a Periodic Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya Interaction.

R. A. Gallardo; David Cortés-Ortuño; T. Schneider; A. Roldán-Molina; Fusheng Ma; R. E. Troncoso; K. Lenz; Hans Fangohr; J. Lindner; P. Landeros

A method to manipulate magnetization reversal in core-shell nanostructures is presented. The focus is on cylindrical multilayer structures comprising of an inner conductor wire covered by two shells: (i) an intermediate non-conducting and non-magnetic shell and (ii) a nanotube made of an outer ferromagnetic layer. The properties of the magnetization reversal of the ferromagnetic phase are investigated when a circular Oersted field is generated by applying an electric current through the inner wire. Coercive fields and remanent magnetization as functions of the circular field strength are explored. By means of a simple analytical model and OOMMF simulations, once the current is turned on, two key results have been found: (i) A manipulable axial demagnetization, that is, a magnetization transition from the quasi uniform alignment to a flux closure circular configuration when the circular field strength is above a critical field; and (ii) a quadratic reduction of the coercivity on the circular field strength...

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Hans Fangohr

University of Southampton

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Marijan Beg

University of Southampton

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Ondrej Hovorka

University of Southampton

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Mark Vousden

University of Southampton

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Rebecca Carey

University of Southampton

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Ryan A. Pepper

University of Southampton

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Thomas Kluyver

University of Southampton

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