Simone Moretti
University of Salamanca
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Featured researches published by Simone Moretti.
Scientific Reports | 2015
E. Martinez; L. Torres; Noel Perez; Maria Auxiliadora Hernandez; V. Raposo; Simone Moretti
Spin orbit interactions are rapidly emerging as the key for enabling efficient current-controlled spintronic devices. Much work has focused on the role of spin-orbit coupling at heavy metal/ferromagnet interfaces in generating current-induced spin-orbit torques. However, the strong influence of the spin-orbit-derived Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) on spin textures in these materials is now becoming apparent. Recent reports suggest DMI-stabilized homochiral domain walls (DWs) can be driven with high efficiency by spin torque from the spin Hall effect. However, the influence of the DMI on the current-induced magnetization switching has not been explored nor is yet well-understood, due in part to the difficulty of disentangling spin torques and spin textures in nano-sized confined samples. Here we study the magnetization reversal of perpendicular magnetized ultrathin dots, and show that the switching mechanism is strongly influenced by the DMI, which promotes a universal chiral non-uniform reversal, even for small samples at the nanoscale. We show that ultrafast current-induced and field-induced magnetization switching consists on local magnetization reversal with domain wall nucleation followed by its propagation along the sample. These findings, not seen in conventional materials, provide essential insights for understanding and exploiting chiral magnetism for emerging spintronics applications.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2016
Simone Moretti; V. Raposo; E. Martinez
The domain wall depinning from a notch in a Permalloy nanostrip on top of a SiO2/Si substrate is studied theoretically under application of static magnetic fields and the injection of short current pulses. The influence of Joule heating on current-induced domain wall depinning is explored self-consistently by coupling the magnetization dynamics in the ferromagnetic strip to the heat transport throughout the system. Our results indicate that Joule heating plays a remarkable role in these processes, resulting in a reduction in the critical depinning field and/or in a temporary destruction of the ferromagnetic order for typically injected current pulses. In agreement with experimental observations, similar pinning-depinning phase diagrams can be deduced for both current polarities when the Joule heating is taken into account. These observations, which are incompatible with the sole contribution of spin transfer torques, provide a deeper understanding of the physics underlying these processes and establish th...
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
V. Raposo; Simone Moretti; Maria Auxiliadora Hernandez; E. Martinez
The current-induced domain wall dynamics along curved ferromagnetic strips is studied by coupling the magnetization dynamics to the heat transport. Permalloy strips with uniform and non-uniform cross section are evaluated, taking into account the influence of the electrical contacts used to inject the current pulses and the substrate on top of which the ferromagnetic strip is sited. Micromagnetic simulations indicate that the geometry and the non-ferromagnetic materials in the system play a significant role in the current-induced domain wall dynamics. Due to the natural pinning, domain walls are hardly affected by the spin-transfer torques when placed in uniform cross section strips under current pulses with reduced magnitude. On the contrary, the current-induced domain wall displacement is significantly different in strips with non-uniform cross section, where thermal gradients emerge as due to the Joule heating. It is found that these thermal gradients can assist or act against the pure spin-transfer torques, in agreement with the recent experimental observations.
Applied Physics Express | 2016
E. Martinez; O. Alejos; Maria Auxiliadora Hernandez; V. Raposo; Luis Sánchez-Tejerina; Simone Moretti
The current-driven dynamics of chiral domain walls is theoretically studied by means of realistic micromagnetic simulations. Trains of current pulses flowing through the heavy metal underneath the ferromagnetic layer are injected with different directions with respect to the ferromagnetic strip axis. The wall displacement is highly sensitive to the wall configuration and to the angle between the current and the longitudinal axis of the strip. These simulations can account for the experimental behavior at large currents, but preliminary results at lower current density point towards incompatibilities between the model and the experiment that need further experimental and theoretical efforts.
Physical Review B | 2017
Simone Moretti; Michele Voto; Eduardo Martínez
Comision Europea (P7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN 608031) Gobierno de Espana (MAT2014-52477-C5-4-P) Junta de Castilla y Leon (SA282U14, SA090U16)
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
T. Schulz; O. Alejos; E. Martinez; Kjetil M. D. Hals; Karin Garcia; Laurent Vila; Kyujoon Lee; Roberto Lo Conte; Gurucharan V. Karnad; Simone Moretti; Berthold Ocker; D. Ravelosona; Arne Brataas; Mathias Kläui
We report field- and current-induced domain wall (DW) depinning experiments in Ta\Co20Fe60B20\MgO nanowires through a Hall cross geometry. While purely field-induced depinning shows no angular dependence on in-plane fields, the effect of the current depends crucially on the internal DW structure, which we manipulate by an external magnetic in-plane field. We show depinning measurements for a current sent parallel to the DW and compare its depinning efficiency with the conventional case of current flowing perpendicularly to the DW. We find that the maximum efficiency is similar for both current directions within the error bars, which is in line with a dominating damping-like spin-orbit torque (SOT) and indicates that no large additional torques arise for currents perpendicular to the DW. Finally, we find a varying dependence of the maximum depinning efficiency angle for different DWs and pinning levels. This emphasizes the importance of our full angular scans compared with previously used measurements for just two field directions (parallel and perpendicular to the DW) to determine the real torque strength and shows the sensitivity of the SOT to the precise DW structure and pinning sites.
Physical Review B | 2017
Simone Moretti; V. Raposo; Eduardo Martínez; L. Lopez-Diaz
Comision Europea (P7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN 608031) Gobierno de Espana (MAT2014-52477-C5-4-P) Junta de Castilla y Leon (SA282U14 y SA090U16)
Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials | 2017
S. Ali Nasseri; Simone Moretti; E. Martinez; C. Serpico; Gianfranco Durin
Abstract Recent studies on heterostructures of ultrathin ferromagnets sandwiched between a heavy metal layer and an oxide have highlighted the importance of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) and broken inversion symmetry in domain wall (DW) motion. Specifically, chiral DWs are stabilized in these systems due to the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI). SOC can also lead to enhanced current induced DW motion, with the Spin Hall effect (SHE) suggested as the dominant mechanism for this observation. The efficiency of SHE driven DW motion depends on the internal magnetic structure of the DW, which could be controlled using externally applied longitudinal in-plane fields. In this work, micromagnetic simulations and collective coordinate models are used to study current-driven DW motion under longitudinal in-plane fields in perpendicularly magnetized samples with strong DMI. Several extended collective coordinate models are developed to reproduce the micromagnetic results. While these extended models show improvements over traditional models of this kind, there are still discrepancies between them and micromagnetic simulations which require further work.
AIP Advances | 2017
O. Alejos; V. Raposo; Maria Auxiliadora Hernandez; Luis Sánchez-Tejerina; Simone Moretti; E. Martinez
The magnetization dynamics induced by current pulses in a pair of two “S-shaped” ferromagnetic elements, each one consisting on two oppositely tilted tapered spikes at the ends of a straight section, is theoretically studied by means of micromagnetic simulations. Our results indicate that the magnetization reversal is triggered by thermal activation, which assists the current-induced domain nucleation and the propagation of domain walls. The detailed analysis of the magnetization dynamics reveals that the magnetization switching is only achieved when a single domain wall is nucleated in the correct corner of the element. In agreement with recent experimental studies, the switching is purely dictated by the shape, being independent of the current polarity. The statistical study points out that successful switching is only achieved within a narrow range of the current pulse amplitudes.
Physical Review B | 2016
Michele Voto; L. Lopez-Diaz; L. Torres; Simone Moretti