Nikolai S. Kiselev
Forschungszentrum Jülich
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Featured researches published by Nikolai S. Kiselev.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
F. N. Rybakov; A. B. Borisov; Stefan Blügel; Nikolai S. Kiselev
We present a new type of thermodynamically stable magnetic state at interfaces and surfaces of chiral magnets. The state is a soliton solution of micromagnetic equations localized in all three dimensions near a boundary, and it contains a singularity but nevertheless has finite energy. Both features combine to form a quasiparticle state for which we expect unusual transport and dynamical properties. It exhibits high thermal stability and thereby can be considered as a promising object for fundamental research and practical applications in spintronic devices. We identified the range of existence of such particlelike states in the thickness dependent magnetic phase diagram for helimagnet films and analyzed its stability in comparison with the isolated skyrmion within the conical phase. We provide arguments that such a state can be found in different B20-type alloys, e.g., Mn_{1-x}Fe_{x}Ge, Mn_{1-x}Fe_{x}Si, Fe_{1-x}Co_{x}Si.
Nature Communications | 2017
Markus Hoffmann; Bernd Zimmermann; Gideon Müller; Daniel Schürhoff; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Christof Melcher; Stefan Blügel
Chiral magnets are an emerging class of topological matter harboring localized and topologically protected vortex-like magnetic textures called skyrmions, which are currently under intense scrutiny as an entity for information storage and processing. Here, on the level of micromagnetics we rigorously show that chiral magnets can not only host skyrmions but also antiskyrmions as least energy configurations over all non-trivial homotopy classes. We derive practical criteria for their occurrence and coexistence with skyrmions that can be fulfilled by (110)-oriented interfaces depending on the electronic structure. Relating the electronic structure to an atomistic spin-lattice model by means of density functional calculations and minimizing the energy on a mesoscopic scale by applying spin-relaxation methods, we propose a double layer of Fe grown on a W(110) substrate as a practical example. We conjecture that ultra-thin magnetic films grown on semiconductor or heavy metal substrates with C2v symmetry are prototype classes of materials hosting magnetic antiskyrmions.Skyrmions, localized defects in the magnetization, can be stabilised in materials by the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI). Hoffmann et al. predict that, when the DMI is anisotropic, antiskyrmions can be formed and coexist with skyrmions, enabling studies and exploitation of their interactions.
Nature Communications | 2017
Chiming Jin; Zi-An Li; András Kovács; Jan Caron; Fengshan Zheng; F. N. Rybakov; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Haifeng Du; Stefan Blügel; Mingliang Tian; Yuheng Zhang; M. Farle; Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski
The ability to controllably manipulate magnetic skyrmions, small magnetic whirls with particle-like properties, in nanostructured elements is a prerequisite for incorporating them into spintronic devices. Here, we use state-of-the-art electron holographic imaging to directly visualize the morphology and nucleation of magnetic skyrmions in a wedge-shaped FeGe nanostripe that has a width in the range of 45–150u2009nm. We find that geometrically-confined skyrmions are able to adopt a wide range of sizes and ellipticities in a nanostripe that are absent in both thin films and bulk materials and can be created from a helical magnetic state with a distorted edge twist in a simple and efficient manner. We perform a theoretical analysis based on a three-dimensional general model of isotropic chiral magnets to confirm our experimental results. The flexibility and ease of formation of geometrically confined magnetic skyrmions may help to optimize the design of skyrmion-based memory devices.
New Journal of Physics | 2016
F. N. Rybakov; A. B. Borisov; Stefan Blügel; Nikolai S. Kiselev
We present the phase diagram of magnetic states for films of isotropic chiral magnets calculated as function of applied magnetic field and thickness of the film. We have found a novel magnetic state driven by the natural confinement of the crystal, localized at the surface and stacked on top of the conical bulk phase. This magnetic surface state has a three-dimensional (3D) chiral spin-texture described by the superposition of helical and cycloidal spin spirals. This surface state exists for a large range of applied magnetic fields and for any film thickness beyond a critical one. We also identified the whole thickness and field range for which the skyrmion lattice becomes the ground state of the system. Below a certain critical thickness the surface state and bulk conical phase are suppressed in favor of the skyrmion lattice. Unraveling of those phases and the construction of the phase diagram became possible using advanced computational techniques for direct energy minimization applied to a basic 3D model for chiral magnets. Presented results provide a comprehensive theoretical description for those effects already observed in experiments on thin films of chiral magnets, predict new effects important for applications and open perspectives for experimental studies of such systems.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Kazunari Shibata; András Kovács; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Naoya Kanazawa; Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski; Yoshinori Tokura
The internal and lattice structures of magnetic Skyrmions in B20-type FeGe are investigated using off-axis electron holography. The temperature, magnetic field, and angular dependence of the magnetic moments of individual Skyrmions are analyzed. The internal Skyrmion shape is found to vary with applied magnetic field. In contrast, the inter-Skyrmion distance remains almost unchanged in the lattice phase over the studied range of applied field. The amplitude of the local magnetic moment is found to vary with temperature, while the Skyrmion shape does not change significantly. Deviations from a circular to a hexagonal Skyrmion structure are observed in the lattice phase, in agreement with the results of micromagnetic simulations.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2018
Fengshan Zheng; F. N. Rybakov; A. B. Borisov; Dongsheng Song; Shasha Wang; Zi-An Li; Haifeng Du; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Jan Caron; András Kovács; Mingliang Tian; Yuheng Zhang; Stefan Blügel; Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski
Chiral magnetic skyrmions1,2 are nanoscale vortex-like spin textures that form in the presence of an applied magnetic field in ferromagnets that support the Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya interaction (DMI) because of strong spin–orbit coupling and broken inversion symmetry of the crystal3,4. In sharp contrast to other systems5,6 that allow for the formation of a variety of two-dimensional (2D) skyrmions, in chiral magnets the presence of the DMI commonly prevents the stability and coexistence of topological excitations of different types7. Recently, a new type of localized particle-like object—the chiral bobber (ChB)—was predicted theoretically in such materials8. However, its existence has not yet been verified experimentally. Here, we report the direct observation of ChBs in thin films of B20-type FeGe by means of quantitative off-axis electron holography (EH). We identify the part of the temperature–magnetic field phase diagram in which ChBs exist and distinguish two mechanisms for their nucleation. Furthermore, we show that ChBs are able to coexist with skyrmions over a wide range of parameters, which suggests their possible practical applications in novel magnetic solid-state memory devices, in which a stream of binary data bits can be encoded by a sequence of skyrmions and bobbers.Electron holography enables direct experimental verification of the existence of chiral bobbers in thin films of chiral magnets.The use of chiral skyrmions, which are nanoscale vortex-like spin textures, as movable data bit carriers forms the basis of a recently proposed concept for magnetic solid-state memory. In this concept, skyrmions are considered to be unique localized spin textures, which are used to encode data through the quantization of different distances between identical skyrmions on a guiding nanostripe. However, the conservation of distances between highly mobile and interacting skyrmions is difficult to implement in practice. Here, we report the direct observation of another type of theoretically-predicted localized magnetic state, which is referred to as a chiral bobber (ChB), using quantitative off-axis electron holography. We show that ChBs can coexist together with skyrmions. Our results suggest a novel approach for data encoding, whereby a stream of binary data representing a sequence of ones and zeros can be encoded via a sequence of skyrmions and bobbers. The need to maintain defined distances between data bit carriers is then not required. The proposed concept of data encoding promises to expedite the realization of a new generation of magnetic solid-state memory.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Ashis Kumar Nandy; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Stefan Blügel
We report on a general principle using interlayer exchange coupling to extend the regime of chiral magnetic films in which stable or metastable magnetic Skyrmions can appear at a zero magnetic field. We verify this concept on the basis of a first-principles model for a Mn monolayer on a W(001) substrate, a prototype chiral magnet for which the atomic-scale magnetic texture is determined by the frustration of exchange interactions, impossible to unwind by laboratory magnetic fields. By means of abxa0initio calculations for the Mn/W_{m}/Co_{n}/Pt/W(001) multilayer system we show that for certain thicknesses m of the W spacer and n of the Co reference layer, the effective field of the reference layer fully substitutes the required magnetic field for Skyrmion formation.
Applied Physics Letters | 2007
Nikolai S. Kiselev; I. E. Dragunov; U. K. Rößler; A. N. Bogdanov
Antiferromagnetically coupled multilayers with perpendicular anisotropy, such as [CoPt]∕Ru, Co∕Ir, and Fe∕Au, display ferromagnetic stripe phases as the ground states. It is theoretically shown that the antiferromagnetic interlayer exchange causes a relative shift of domains in adjacent layers. This “exchange shift” is responsible for several recently observed effects: an anomalous broadening of domain walls, the formation of the so-called “tiger-tail” patterns, and a “mixed state” of antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic domains in [CoPt]∕Ru multilayers. The derived analytical relations between the values of the shift and the strength of antiferromagnetic coupling provide an effective method for a quantitative determination of the interlayer exchange interactions.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Pavel F. Bessarab; Gideon Müller; Igor S. Lobanov; F. N. Rybakov; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Hannes Jónsson; Valery M. Uzdin; Stefan Blügel; Lars Bergqvist; Anna Delin
The skyrmion racetrack is a promising concept for future information technology. There, binary bits are carried by nanoscale spin swirls–skyrmions–driven along magnetic strips. Stability of the skyrmions is a critical issue for realising this technology. Here we demonstrate that the racetrack skyrmion lifetime can be calculated from first principles as a function of temperature, magnetic field and track width. Our method combines harmonic transition state theory extended to include Goldstone modes, with an atomistic spin Hamiltonian parametrized from density functional theory calculations. We demonstrate that two annihilation mechanisms contribute to the skyrmion stability: At low external magnetic field, escape through the track boundary prevails, but a crossover field exists, above which the collapse in the interior becomes dominant. Considering a Pd/Fe bilayer on an Ir(111) substrate as a well-established model system, the calculated skyrmion lifetime is found to be consistent with reported experimental measurements. Our simulations also show that the Arrhenius pre-exponential factor of escape depends only weakly on the external magnetic field, whereas the pre-exponential factor for collapse is strongly field dependent. Our results open the door for predictive simulations, free from empirical parameters, to aid the design of skyrmion-based information technology.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Changhoon Heo; Nikolai S. Kiselev; Ashis Kumar Nandy; Stefan Blügel; T.H.M. Rasing
Magnetic chiral skyrmions are vortex like spin structures that appear as stable or meta-stable states in magnetic materials due to the interplay between the symmetric and antisymmetric exchange interactions, applied magnetic field and/or uniaxial anisotropy. Their small size and internal stability make them prospective objects for data storage but for this, the controlled switching between skyrmion states of opposite polarity and topological charge is essential. Here we present a study of magnetic skyrmion switching by an applied magnetic field pulse based on a discrete model of classical spins and atomistic spin dynamics. We found a finite range of coupling parameters corresponding to the coexistence of two degenerate isolated skyrmions characterized by mutually inverted spin structures with opposite polarity and topological charge. We demonstrate how for a wide range of material parameters a short inclined magnetic field pulse can initiate the reliable switching between these states at GHz rates. Detailed analysis of the switching mechanism revealed the complex path of the system accompanied with the excitation of a chiral-achiral meron pair and the formation of an achiral skyrmion.