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Dive into the research topics where P. Wadley is active.

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Featured researches published by P. Wadley.


Science | 2016

Electrical switching of an antiferromagnet

P. Wadley; Bryn Howells; J. Železný; C. Andrews; V. Hills; R. P. Campion; V. Novák; K. Olejník; Francesco Maccherozzi; S. S. Dhesi; S. Martin; T. Wagner; J. Wunderlich; Frank Freimuth; Yuriy Mokrousov; Jan Kuneš; J.S. Chauhan; M.J. Grzybowski; A. W. Rushforth; K. W. Edmonds; B. L. Gallagher; T. Jungwirth

Manipulating a stubborn magnet Spintronics is an alternative to conventional electronics, based on using the electrons spin rather than its charge. Spintronic devices, such as magnetic memory, have traditionally used ferromagnetic materials to encode the 1s and 0s of the binary code. A weakness of this approach—that strong magnetic fields can erase the encoded information—could be avoided by using antiferromagnets instead of ferromagnets. But manipulating the magnetic ordering of antiferromagnets is tricky. Now, Wadley et al. have found a way (see the Perspective by Marrows). Running currents along specific directions in the thin films of the antiferromagnetic compound CuMnAs reoriented the magnetic domains in the material. Science, this issue p. 587; see also p. 558 Transport and optical measurements are used to demonstrate the switching of domains in the antiferromagnetic compound CuMnAs. [Also see Perspective by Marrows] Antiferromagnets are hard to control by external magnetic fields because of the alternating directions of magnetic moments on individual atoms and the resulting zero net magnetization. However, relativistic quantum mechanics allows for generating current-induced internal fields whose sign alternates with the periodicity of the antiferromagnetic lattice. Using these fields, which couple strongly to the antiferromagnetic order, we demonstrate room-temperature electrical switching between stable configurations in antiferromagnetic CuMnAs thin-film devices by applied current with magnitudes of order 106 ampere per square centimeter. Electrical writing is combined in our solid-state memory with electrical readout and the stored magnetic state is insensitive to and produces no external magnetic field perturbations, which illustrates the unique merits of antiferromagnets for spintronics.


Nature Materials | 2014

Room-temperature antiferromagnetic memory resistor.

X. Marti; I. Fina; Carlos Frontera; Jian Liu; P. Wadley; Qing He; R. J. Paull; James D. Clarkson; J. Kudrnovský; I. Turek; Jan Kuneš; Di Yi; Jiun-Haw Chu; C. T. Nelson; Lu You; Elke Arenholz; Sayeef Salahuddin; J. Fontcuberta; T. Jungwirth; R. Ramesh

The bistability of ordered spin states in ferromagnets provides the basis for magnetic memory functionality. The latest generation of magnetic random access memories rely on an efficient approach in which magnetic fields are replaced by electrical means for writing and reading the information in ferromagnets. This concept may eventually reduce the sensitivity of ferromagnets to magnetic field perturbations to being a weakness for data retention and the ferromagnetic stray fields to an obstacle for high-density memory integration. Here we report a room-temperature bistable antiferromagnetic (AFM) memory that produces negligible stray fields and is insensitive to strong magnetic fields. We use a resistor made of a FeRh AFM, which orders ferromagnetically roughly 100 K above room temperature, and therefore allows us to set different collective directions for the Fe moments by applied magnetic field. On cooling to room temperature, AFM order sets in with the direction of the AFM moments predetermined by the field and moment direction in the high-temperature ferromagnetic state. For electrical reading, we use an AFM analogue of the anisotropic magnetoresistance. Our microscopic theory modelling confirms that this archetypical spintronic effect, discovered more than 150 years ago in ferromagnets, is also present in AFMs. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of fabricating room-temperature spintronic memories with AFMs, which in turn expands the base of available magnetic materials for devices with properties that cannot be achieved with ferromagnets.


Nature Communications | 2013

Tetragonal phase of epitaxial room-temperature antiferromagnet CuMnAs

P. Wadley; V. Novák; R. P. Campion; Christian Rinaldi; X. Marti; H. Reichlová; J. Železný; Jaume Gazquez; M.A. Roldan; M. Varela; D. Khalyavin; S. Langridge; Dominik Kriegner; F. Máca; J. Mašek; Riccardo Bertacco; Václav Holý; A. W. Rushforth; K. W. Edmonds; B. L. Gallagher; C. T. Foxon; J. Wunderlich; T. Jungwirth

Recent studies have demonstrated the potential of antiferromagnets as the active component in spintronic devices. This is in contrast to their current passive role as pinning layers in hard disk read heads and magnetic memories. Here we report the epitaxial growth of a new high-temperature antiferromagnetic material, tetragonal CuMnAs, which exhibits excellent crystal quality, chemical order and compatibility with existing semiconductor technologies. We demonstrate its growth on the III-V semiconductors GaAs and GaP, and show that the structure is also lattice matched to Si. Neutron diffraction shows collinear antiferromagnetic order with a high Néel temperature. Combined with our demonstration of room-temperature-exchange coupling in a CuMnAs/Fe bilayer, we conclude that tetragonal CuMnAs films are suitable candidate materials for antiferromagnetic spintronics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Non-volatile voltage control of magnetization and magnetic domain walls in magnetostrictive epitaxial thin films

D. E. Parkes; S. A. Cavill; A. T. Hindmarch; P. Wadley; F. McGee; C.R. Staddon; K. W. Edmonds; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; A. W. Rushforth

We demonstrate reproducible voltage induced non-volatile switching of the magnetization in an epitaxial thin Fe81Ga19 film. Switching is induced at room temperature and without the aid of an external magnetic field. This is achieved by the modification of the magnetic anisotropy by mechanical strain induced by a piezoelectric transducer attached to the layer. Epitaxial Fe81Ga19 is shown to possess the favourable combination of cubic magnetic anisotropy and large magnetostriction necessary to achieve this functionality with experimentally accessible levels of strain. The switching of the magnetization proceeds by the motion of magnetic domain walls, also controlled by the voltage induced strain.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Magnetostrictive thin films for microwave spintronics

D. E. Parkes; L. R. Shelford; P. Wadley; Václav Holý; M. Wang; A. T. Hindmarch; G. van der Laan; R. P. Campion; K. W. Edmonds; S. A. Cavill; A. W. Rushforth

Multiferroic composite materials, consisting of coupled ferromagnetic and piezoelectric phases, are of great importance in the drive towards creating faster, smaller and more energy efficient devices for information and communications technologies. Such devices require thin ferromagnetic films with large magnetostriction and narrow microwave resonance linewidths. Both properties are often degraded, compared to bulk materials, due to structural imperfections and interface effects in the thin films. We report the development of epitaxial thin films of Galfenol (Fe81Ga19) with magnetostriction as large as the best reported values for bulk material. This allows the magnetic anisotropy and microwave resonant frequency to be tuned by voltage-induced strain, with a larger magnetoelectric response and a narrower linewidth than any previously reported Galfenol thin films. The combination of these properties make epitaxial thin films excellent candidates for developing tunable devices for magnetic information storage, processing and microwave communications.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Imaging Current-Induced Switching of Antiferromagnetic Domains in CuMnAs

M.J. Grzybowski; P. Wadley; K. W. Edmonds; R. Beardsley; Victoria Anne Hills; R. P. Campion; B. L. Gallagher; J.S. Chauhan; V. Novák; T. Jungwirth; Francesco Maccherozzi; S. S. Dhesi

The magnetic order in antiferromagnetic materials is hard to control with external magnetic fields. Using x-ray magnetic linear dichroism microscopy, we show that staggered effective fields generated by electrical current can induce modification of the antiferromagnetic domain structure in microdevices fabricated from a tetragonal CuMnAs thin film. A clear correlation between the average domain orientation and the anisotropy of the electrical resistance is demonstrated, with both showing reproducible switching in response to orthogonally applied current pulses. However, the behavior is inhomogeneous at the submicron level, highlighting the complex nature of the switching process in multidomain antiferromagnetic films.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Picosecond inverse magnetostriction in galfenol thin films

J. V. Jäger; A. V. Scherbakov; T. L. Linnik; D. R. Yakovlev; M. Wang; P. Wadley; V. Holy; S. A. Cavill; A. V. Akimov; A. W. Rushforth; M. Bayer

Coherent high-amplitude precession of the magnetization and spin waves with frequencies up to 40 GHz are generated by injecting picosecond compressive and shear acoustic pulses into nanometer-sized galfenol (Fe81Ga19) films. The magnetization modulation is due to the picosecond inverse magnetostrictive effect. The oscillations of the magnetization measured by magneto-optical Kerr rotation last for several nanoseconds, and the maximum modulation of the in-plane effective magnetic field is as high as 40 mT. These results in combination with a comprehensive theoretical analysis show that galfenol films possess excellent properties for ultrafast magnetization control based on the picosecond inverse magnetostrictive effect.


Nature Photonics | 2017

Optical determination of the Néel vector in a CuMnAs thin-film antiferromagnet

V. Saidl; P. Němec; P. Wadley; V. Hills; R. P. Campion; V. Novák; K. W. Edmonds; Francesco Maccherozzi; S. S. Dhesi; B. L. Gallagher; F. Trojánek; Jan Kuneš; J. Železný; P. Malý; T. Jungwirth

Recent breakthroughs in electrical detection and manipulation of antiferromagnets have opened a new avenue in the research of non-volatile spintronic devices.1-10 Antiparallel spin sublattices in antiferromagnets, producing zero dipolar fields, lead to the insensitivity to magnetic field perturbations, multi-level stability, ultrafast spin dynamics and other favorable characteristics which may find utility in fields ranging from magnetic memories to optical signal processing. However, the absence of a net magnetic moment and the ultra-short magnetization dynamics timescales make antiferromagnets notoriously difficult to study by common magnetometers or magnetic resonance techniques. In this paper we demonstrate the experimental determination of the Neel vector in a thin film of antiferromagnetic CuMnAs9,10 which is the prominent material used in the first realization of antiferromagnetic memory chips.10 We employ a femtosecond pump-probe magneto-optical experiment based on magnetic linear dichroism. This table-top optical method is considerably more accessible than the traditionally employed large scale facility techniques like neutron diffraction11 and Xray magnetic dichroism measurements.12-14 This optical technique allows an unambiguous direct determination of the Neel vector orientation in thin antiferromagnetic films utilized in devices directly from measured data without fitting to a theoretical model.


Nature Communications | 2017

Antiferromagnetic CuMnAs multi-level memory cell with microelectronic compatibility

K. Olejník; Vivien Schuler; Xavi Marti; V. Novák; Zdeněk Kašpar; P. Wadley; R. P. Campion; K. W. Edmonds; B. L. Gallagher; Javier Garcés; Manuel Baumgartner; Pietro Gambardella; T. Jungwirth

Antiferromagnets offer a unique combination of properties including the radiation and magnetic field hardness, the absence of stray magnetic fields, and the spin-dynamics frequency scale in terahertz. Recent experiments have demonstrated that relativistic spin-orbit torques can provide the means for an efficient electric control of antiferromagnetic moments. Here we show that elementary-shape memory cells fabricated from a single-layer antiferromagnet CuMnAs deposited on a III–V or Si substrate have deterministic multi-level switching characteristics. They allow for counting and recording thousands of input pulses and responding to pulses of lengths downscaled to hundreds of picoseconds. To demonstrate the compatibility with common microelectronic circuitry, we implemented the antiferromagnetic bit cell in a standard printed circuit board managed and powered at ambient conditions by a computer via a USB interface. Our results open a path towards specialized embedded memory-logic applications and ultra-fast components based on antiferromagnets.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Antiferromagnetic structure in tetragonal CuMnAs thin films

P. Wadley; V. Hills; M. R. Shahedkhah; K. W. Edmonds; R. P. Campion; V. Novák; B. Ouladdiaf; D. Khalyavin; S. Langridge; V. Saidl; P. Nemec; A. W. Rushforth; B. L. Gallagher; S. S. Dhesi; Francesco Maccherozzi; J. Železný; T. Jungwirth

Tetragonal CuMnAs is an antiferromagnetic material with favourable properties for applications in spintronics. Using a combination of neutron diffraction and x-ray magnetic linear dichroism, we determine the spin axis and magnetic structure in tetragonal CuMnAs, and reveal the presence of an interfacial uniaxial magnetic anisotropy. From the temperature-dependence of the neutron diffraction intensities, the Néel temperature is shown to be (480 ± 5) K. Ab initio calculations indicate a weak anisotropy in the (ab) plane for bulk crystals, with a large anisotropy energy barrier between in-plane and perpendicular-to-plane directions.

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R. P. Campion

University of Nottingham

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K. W. Edmonds

University of Nottingham

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T. Jungwirth

University of Nottingham

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V. Novák

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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M. Wang

University College London

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S. S. Dhesi

Diamond Light Source (United Kingdom)

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P. Němec

Charles University in Prague

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