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Dive into the research topics where J. S. White is active.

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Featured researches published by J. S. White.


Nature Communications | 2015

A new class of chiral materials hosting magnetic skyrmions beyond room temperature

Y. Tokunaga; Xiuzhen Yu; J. S. White; Henrik M. Rønnow; D. Morikawa; Y. Taguchi; Yoshinori Tokura

Skyrmions, topologically protected vortex-like nanometric spin textures in magnets, have been attracting increasing attention for emergent electromagnetic responses and possible technological applications for spintronics. In particular, metallic magnets with chiral and cubic/tetragonal crystal structure may have high potential to host skyrmions that can be driven by low electrical current excitation. However, experimental observations of skyrmions have been limited to below room temperature for the metallic chiral magnets, specifically for the MnSi-type B20 compounds. Towards technological applications, transcending this limitation is crucial. Here we demonstrate the formation of skyrmions with unique spin helicity both at and above room temperature in a family of cubic chiral magnets: β-Mn-type Co-Zn-Mn alloys with a different chiral space group from that of B20 compounds. Lorentz transmission electron microscopy, magnetization and small-angle neutron scattering measurements unambiguously reveal formation of a skyrmion crystal under application of a magnetic field in both thin-plate and bulk forms.


Nature Materials | 2015

Néel-type skyrmion lattice with confined orientation in the polar magnetic semiconductor GaV4S8.

I. Kezsmarki; Sándor Bordács; Peter Milde; Erik Neuber; Lukas M. Eng; J. S. White; Henrik M. Rønnow; C. D. Dewhurst; Masahito Mochizuki; K. Yanai; Hiroyuki Nakamura; D. Ehlers; V. Tsurkan; A. Loidl

Following the early prediction of the skyrmion lattice (SkL)--a periodic array of spin vortices--it has been observed recently in various magnetic crystals mostly with chiral structure. Although non-chiral but polar crystals with Cnv symmetry were identified as ideal SkL hosts in pioneering theoretical studies, this archetype of SkL has remained experimentally unexplored. Here, we report the discovery of a SkL in the polar magnetic semiconductor GaV4S8 with rhombohedral (C3v) symmetry and easy axis anisotropy. The SkL exists over an unusually broad temperature range compared with other bulk crystals and the orientation of the vortices is not controlled by the external magnetic field, but instead confined to the magnetic easy axis. Supporting theory attributes these unique features to a new Néel-type of SkL describable as a superposition of spin cycloids in contrast to the Bloch-type SkL in chiral magnets described in terms of spin helices.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2012

Electric field control of the skyrmion lattice in Cu2OSeO3

J. S. White; I. Levatić; Arash Alahgholipour Omrani; Nikola Egetenmeyer; Krunoslav Prsa; Ivica Živković; J. L. Gavilano; Joachim Kohlbrecher; Marek Bartkowiak; Helmuth Berger; Henrik M. Rønnow

Small-angle neutron scattering has been employed to study the influence of applied electric (E-)fields on the skyrmion lattice in the chiral lattice magnetoelectric Cu(2)OSeO(3). Using an experimental geometry with the E-field parallel to the [111] axis, and the magnetic field parallel to the [11(-)0] axis, we demonstrate that the effect of applying an E-field is to controllably rotate the skyrmion lattice around the magnetic field axis. Our results are an important first demonstration for a microscopic coupling between applied E-fields and the skyrmions in an insulator, and show that the general emergent properties of skyrmions may be tailored according to the properties of the host system.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Electric-Field-Induced Skyrmion Distortion and Giant Lattice Rotation in the Magnetoelectric Insulator Cu2OSeO3

J. S. White; Krunoslav Prsa; Ping Huang; Arash Alahgholipour Omrani; Ivica Živković; Marek Bartkowiak; H. Berger; Arnaud Magrez; J. L. Gavilano; G. Nagy; Jiadong Zang; Henrik M. Rønnow

Uniquely in Cu2OSeO3, the Skyrmions, which are topologically protected magnetic spin vortexlike objects, display a magnetoelectric coupling and can be manipulated by externally applied electric (E) fields. Here, we explore the E-field coupling to the magnetoelectric Skyrmion lattice phase, and study the response using neutron scattering. Giant E-field induced rotations of the Skyrmion lattice are achieved that span a range of ∼25°. Supporting calculations show that an E-field-induced Skyrmion distortion lies behind the lattice rotation. Overall, we present a new approach to Skyrmion control that makes no use of spin-transfer torques due to currents of either electrons or magnons.


Nature Materials | 2016

Robust metastable skyrmions and their triangular–square lattice structural transition in a high-temperature chiral magnet

Kosuke Karube; J. S. White; N. Reynolds; J. L. Gavilano; Hiroshi Oike; Akiko Kikkawa; Fumitaka Kagawa; Y. Tokunaga; Henrik M. Rønnow; Yoshinori Tokura; Y. Taguchi

Skyrmions, topologically protected nanometric spin vortices, are being investigated extensively in various magnets. Among them, many structurally chiral cubic magnets host the triangular-lattice skyrmion crystal (SkX) as the thermodynamic equilibrium state. However, this state exists only in a narrow temperature and magnetic-field region just below the magnetic transition temperature Tc, while a helical or conical magnetic state prevails at lower temperatures. Here we describe that for a room-temperature skyrmion material, β-Mn-type Co 8Zn 8Mn 4, a field-cooling via the equilibrium SkX state can suppress the transition to the helical or conical state, instead realizing robust metastable SkX states that survive over a very wide temperature and magnetic-field region. Furthermore, the lattice form of the metastable SkX is found to undergo reversible transitions between a conventional triangular lattice and a novel square lattice upon varying the temperature and magnetic field. These findings exemplify the topological robustness of the once-created skyrmions, and establish metastable skyrmion phases as a fertile ground for technological applications.


Physical Review B | 2011

Gap in KFe2As2studied by small-angle neutron scattering observations of the magnetic vortex lattice

Hazuki Kawano-Furukawa; Charlotte Bowell; J. S. White; Richard Heslop; A. S. Cameron; E. M. Forgan; K. Kihou; C. H. Lee; A. Iyo; H. Eisaki; T. Saito; Hideto Fukazawa; Yoh Kohori; R. Cubitt; C. D. Dewhurst; J. L. Gavilano; M. Zolliker

We report the observation, by small-angle-neutron-scattering (SANS), of magnetic flux lines “vortices” in super-clean KFe2As2 single crystals. The results show clear Bragg spots from a well ordered vortex lattice, for the first time in a FeAs superconductor. These measurements can give important information about the pairing state in this material, because the spatial variation of magnetic field in the vortex lattice reflects this pairing. With field parallel to the fourfold c-axis, nearly isotropic hexagonal packing of vortices was observed without VL-symmetry transitions up to high fields, indicating rather small anisotropy of the superconducting properties around this axis. This rules out gap nodes parallel to the c-axis, and thus d-wave and also anisotropic s-wave pairing. The strong temperature-dependence of the scattered intensity down to T Tc further indicates either widely different full gaps on different Fermi surface sheets, or nodal lines perpendicular to the axis. PACS numbers: 74.25.Uv, 74.70.Xa, 74.20.Rp, 74.25.-q


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Filming the formation and fluctuation of skyrmion domains by cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy

Jayaraman Rajeswari; Ping Huang; Giulia F. Mancini; Yoshie Murooka; Tatiana Latychevskaia; D. McGrouther; Marco Cantoni; Edoardo Baldini; J. S. White; Arnaud Magrez; Thierry Giamarchi; Henrik M. Rønnow; Fabrizio Carbone

Significance The need for denser storage devices calls for new materials and nanostructures capable of confining single bits of information in a few nanometers. A new topological distribution of spins termed skyrmions is emerging, which promises to robustly confine a small magnetization in a few-nanometers-wide circular domain. A great deal of attention is being devoted to the understanding of these magnetic patterns and their manipulation. We manufactured a large nanoslice supporting over 70,000 skyrmions, and film their evolution in direct-space via cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy. We reveal the octagonal distortion of the skyrmion lattice and show how these distortions and other defects impact its long-range order. These results pave the way to the control of a large two-dimensional array of skyrmions. Magnetic skyrmions are promising candidates as information carriers in logic or storage devices thanks to their robustness, guaranteed by the topological protection, and their nanometric size. Currently, little is known about the influence of parameters such as disorder, defects, or external stimuli on the long-range spatial distribution and temporal evolution of the skyrmion lattice. Here, using a large (7.3×7.3 μm2) single-crystal nanoslice (150 nm thick) of Cu2OSeO3, we image up to 70,000 skyrmions by means of cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy as a function of the applied magnetic field. The emergence of the skyrmion lattice from the helimagnetic phase is monitored, revealing the existence of a glassy skyrmion phase at the phase transition field, where patches of an octagonally distorted skyrmion lattice are also discovered. In the skyrmion phase, dislocations are shown to cause the emergence and switching between domains with different lattice orientations, and the temporal fluctuation of these domains is filmed. These results demonstrate the importance of direct-space and real-time imaging of skyrmion domains for addressing both their long-range topology and stability.


Physical Review B | 2015

Pressure dependence of the magnetic order in CrAs: A neutron diffraction investigation

L. Keller; J. S. White; Matthias Frontzek; P. Babkevich; Michael A. Susner; Z. C. Sims; Athena S. Sefat; Henrik M. Rønnow; Ch. Rüegg

The suppression of magnetic order with pressure concomitant with the appearance of pressure-induced superconductivity was recently discovered in CrAs. Here we present a neutron diffraction study of the pressure evolution of the helimagnetic ground state towards and in the vicinity of the superconducting phase. Neutron diffraction on polycrystalline CrAs was employed from zero pressure to 0.65 GPa and at various temperatures. The helimagnetic long-range order is sustained under pressure and the magnetic propagation vector does not show any considerable change. The average ordered magnetic moment is reduced from 1.73(2) mu(B) at ambient pressure to 0.4(1) mu(B) close to the critical pressure P-c approximate to 0.7 GPa, at which magnetic order is completely suppressed. The width of the magnetic Bragg peaks strongly depends on temperature and pressure, showing a maximum in the region of the onset of superconductivity. We interpret this as associated with competing ground states in the vicinity of the superconducting phase.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Exploring the fragile antiferromagnetic superconducting phase in CeCoIn5.

E. Blackburn; P. Das; M. R. Eskildsen; E. M. Forgan; Mark Laver; Christof Niedermayer; C. Petrovic; J. S. White

CeCoIn5 is a heavy fermion type-II superconductor showing clear signs of Pauli-limited superconductivity. A variety of measurements give evidence for a transition at high magnetic fields inside the superconducting state, when the field is applied either parallel to or perpendicular to the c axis. When the field is perpendicular to the c axis, antiferromagnetic order develops on the high-field side of the transition. This order remains as the field is rotated out of the basal plane, but the associated moment eventually disappears above 17°, indicating that anomalies seen with the field parallel to the c axis are not related to this magnetic order. We discuss the implications of this finding.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Fermi Surface and Order Parameter Driven Vortex Lattice Structure Transitions in Twin-Free YBa2Cu3O7

J. S. White; V. Hinkov; R. W. Heslop; R. J. Lycett; E. M. Forgan; C. Bowell; S. Strässle; A. B. Abrahamsen; Mark Laver; C. D. Dewhurst; J. Kohlbrecher; J. L. Gavilano; J. Mesot; B. Keimer; A. Erb

We report on small-angle neutron scattering studies of the intrinsic vortex lattice (VL) structure in detwinned YBa2Cu3O7 at 2 K, and in fields up to 10.8 T. Because of the suppressed pinning to twin-domain boundaries, a new distorted hexagonal VL structure phase is stabilized at intermediate fields. It is separated from a low-field hexagonal phase of different orientation and distortion by a first-order transition at 2.0(2) T that is probably driven by Fermi surface effects. We argue that another first-order transition at 6.7(2) T, into a rhombic structure with a distortion of opposite sign, marks a crossover from a regime where Fermi surface anisotropy is dominant, to one where the VL structure and distortion is controlled by the order-parameter anisotropy.

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Henrik M. Rønnow

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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E. M. Forgan

University of Birmingham

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Andrea Bianchi

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Arnaud Magrez

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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L. DeBeer-Schmitt

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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