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Dive into the research topics where Xiuzhen Yu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiuzhen Yu.


Science | 2012

Observation of skyrmions in a multiferroic material.

S. Seki; Xiuzhen Yu; Shintaro Ishiwata; Yoshinori Tokura

Harnessing the Magnetoelectric Effect Some multiferroic materials exhibit the so-called magnetoelectric effect, in which an external magnetic field can cause electric polarization and an electric field can cause magnetic order. This is important because the manipulation of magnetic structures by electric means is technologically highly desirable. Seki et al. (p. 198) discovered spin whirlpools called skyrmions in the multiferroic material Cu2OSeO3 and observed a magnetoelectric coupling exerted by the skyrmions. The existence of skyrmions in an insulating magnetoelectric material holds promise for their future manipulation. Whirlpools of spin are observed in an insulating material exhibiting both magnetic and ferroelectric order. A magnetic skyrmion is a topologically stable particle-like object that appears as a vortex-like spin texture at the nanometer scale in a chiral-lattice magnet. Skyrmions have been observed in metallic materials, where they are controllable by electric currents. Here, we report the experimental discovery of magnetoelectric skyrmions in an insulating chiral-lattice magnet Cu2OSeO3 through Lorentz transmission electron microscopy and magnetic susceptibility measurements. We find that the skyrmion can magnetically induce electric polarization. The observed magnetoelectric coupling may potentially enable the manipulation of the skyrmion by an external electric field without losses due to joule heating.


Nature Communications | 2012

Skyrmion flow near room temperature in an ultralow current density

Xiuzhen Yu; Naoya Kanazawa; Weizhu Zhang; Takuro Nagai; Toru Hara; Koji Kimoto; Yoshio Matsui; Y. Onose; Yoshinori Tokura

The manipulation of spin textures with electric currents is an important challenge in the field of spintronics. Many attempts have been made to electrically drive magnetic domain walls in ferromagnets, yet the necessary current density remains quite high (~10(7) A cm(-2)). A recent neutron study combining Hall effect measurements has shown that an ultralow current density of J~10(2) A cm(-2) can trigger the rotational and translational motion of the skyrmion lattice in MnSi, a helimagnet, within a narrow temperature range. Raising the temperature range in which skyrmions are stable and reducing the current required to drive them are therefore desirable objectives. Here we demonstrate near-room-temperature motion of skyrmions driven by electrical currents in a microdevice composed of the helimagnet FeGe, by using in-situ Lorentz transmission electron microscopy. The rotational and translational motions of skyrmion crystal begin under critical current densities far below 100 A cm(-2).


Nano Letters | 2012

Real-Space Observation of Skyrmion Lattice in Helimagnet MnSi Thin Samples

Akira Tonomura; Xiuzhen Yu; Keiichi Yanagisawa; Tsuyoshi Matsuda; Y. Onose; Naoya Kanazawa; Hyun Soon Park; Yoshinori Tokura

Observing and characterizing the spin distributions on a nanometer scale are of vital importance for understanding nanomagnetism and its application to spintronics. The magnetic structure in MnSi thin samples prepared from a bulk, which undergoes a transition from a helix to a skyrmion lattice, was investigated by in situ observation using Lorentz microscopy. Stripe domains were observed at zero applied field below 22.5 K. A skyrmion lattice with 6-fold symmetry in real space appeared when a field of 0.18 T was applied normal to the film plane. The lattice constant was estimated to be 18 nm, almost identical to the helical period. In comparison with the marginally stable skyrmion phase in a bulk sample, the skyrmion phase was stable over a wide range of temperatures and magnetic fields in the thin samples.


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.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Robust formation of Skyrmions and topological Hall effect anomaly in epitaxial thin films of MnSi.

Yufan Li; Naoya Kanazawa; Xiuzhen Yu; Atsushi Tsukazaki; Masashi Kawasaki; Masakazu Ichikawa; Xiaofeng Jin; Fumitaka Kagawa; Yoshinori Tokura

Magnetotransport properties have been investigated for epitaxial thin films of B20-type MnSi grown on Si(111) substrates. Lorentz transmission electron microscopy images clearly point to the robust formation of Skyrmions over a wide temperature-magnetic field region. New features distinct from those reported previously for MnSi are observed for epitaxial films: a shorter (nearly half) period of the spin helix and Skyrmions, and a topological Hall effect anomaly consisting in ∼2.2 times enhancement of the amplitude and in the opposite sign with respect to bulk samples.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2013

Towards control of the size and helicity of skyrmions in helimagnetic alloys by spin-orbit coupling

Kenji Shibata; Xiuzhen Yu; Toru Hara; D. Morikawa; Naoya Kanazawa; Koji Kimoto; Shintaro Ishiwata; Yoshio Matsui; Yoshinori Tokura

K. Shibata, X. Z. Yu, T. Hara, D. Morikawa, N. Kanazawa, K. Kimoto, S. Ishiwata, Y. Matsui and Y. Tokura 1 Department of Applied Physics and Quantum-Phase Electronics Center (QPEC), University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8656, Japan, 2 RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science (CEMS), Wako 351-0198, Japan, 3 Surface Physics and Structure Unit, National Institute for Materials Science, Tsukuba 305-0044, Japan.Chirality--that is, left- or right-handedness--is an important concept in a broad range of scientific areas. In condensed matter, chirality is found not only in molecular or crystal forms, but also in magnetic structures. A magnetic skyrmion is a topologically stable spin vortex structure, as observed in chiral-lattice helimagnets, and is one example of such a structure. The spin swirling direction (skyrmion helicity) should be closely related to the underlying lattice chirality via the relativistic spin-orbit coupling. Here, we report on the correlation between skyrmion helicity and crystal chirality in alloys of helimagnets Mn(1-x)Fe(x)Ge with varying compositions by Lorentz transmission electron microscopy and convergent-beam electron diffraction over a broad range of compositions (x = 0.3-1.0). The skyrmion lattice constant shows non-monotonous variation with composition x, with a divergent behaviour around x = 0.8, where the correlation between magnetic helicity and crystal chirality changes sign. This originates from continuous variation of the spin-orbit coupling strength and its sign reversal in the metallic alloys as a function of x. Controllable spin-orbit coupling may offer a promising way to tune skyrmion size and helicity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Magnetic stripes and skyrmions with helicity reversals

Xiuzhen Yu; Maxim Mostovoy; Yusuke Tokunaga; Weizhu Zhang; Koji Kimoto; Yoshio Matsui; Yoshio Kaneko; Naoto Nagaosa; Yoshinori Tokura

It was recently realized that topological spin textures do not merely have mathematical beauty but can also give rise to unique functionalities of magnetic materials. An example is the skyrmion—a nano-sized bundle of noncoplanar spins—that by virtue of its nontrivial topology acts as a flux of magnetic field on spin-polarized electrons. Lorentz transmission electron microscopy recently emerged as a powerful tool for direct visualization of skyrmions in noncentrosymmetric helimagnets. Topologically, skyrmions are equivalent to magnetic bubbles (cylindrical domains) in ferromagnetic thin films, which were extensively explored in the 1970s for data storage applications. In this study we use Lorentz microscopy to image magnetic domain patterns in the prototypical magnetic oxide–M-type hexaferrite with a hint of scandium. Surprisingly, we find that the magnetic bubbles and stripes in the hexaferrite have a much more complex structure than the skyrmions and spirals in helimagnets, which we associate with the new degree of freedom—helicity (or vector spin chirality) describing the direction of spin rotation across the domain walls. We observe numerous random reversals of helicity in the stripe domain state. Random helicity of cylindrical domain walls coexists with the positional order of magnetic bubbles in a triangular lattice. Most unexpectedly, we observe regular helicity reversals inside skyrmions with an unusual multiple-ring structure.


Nature Materials | 2014

Thermally driven ratchet motion of a skyrmion microcrystal and topological magnon Hall effect

Masahito Mochizuki; Xiuzhen Yu; S. Seki; Naoya Kanazawa; Wataru Koshibae; Jiadong Zang; Maxim Mostovoy; Y. Tokura; Naoto Nagaosa

Spontaneously emergent chirality is an issue of fundamental importance across the natural sciences. It has been argued that a unidirectional (chiral) rotation of a mechanical ratchet is forbidden in thermal equilibrium, but becomes possible in systems out of equilibrium. Here we report our finding that a topologically nontrivial spin texture known as a skyrmion--a particle-like object in which spins point in all directions to wrap a sphere--constitutes such a ratchet. By means of Lorentz transmission electron microscopy we show that micrometre-sized crystals of skyrmions in thin films of Cu2OSeO3 and MnSi exhibit a unidirectional rotation motion. Our numerical simulations based on a stochastic Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation suggest that this rotation is driven solely by thermal fluctuations in the presence of a temperature gradient, whereas in thermal equilibrium it is forbidden by the Bohr-van Leeuwen theorem. We show that the rotational flow of magnons driven by the effective magnetic field of skyrmions gives rise to the skyrmion rotation, therefore suggesting that magnons can be used to control the motion of these spin textures.


Ultramicroscopy | 2010

Local crystal structure analysis with several picometer precision using scanning transmission electron microscopy

Koji Kimoto; Toru Asaka; Xiuzhen Yu; Takuro Nagai; Yoshio Matsui; Kazuo Ishizuka

We report a local crystal structure analysis with a high precision of several picometers on the basis of scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). Advanced annular dark-field (ADF) imaging has been demonstrated using software-based experimental and data-processing techniques, such as the improvement of signal-to-noise ratio, the reduction of image distortion, the quantification of experimental parameters (e.g., thickness and defocus) and the resolution enhancement by maximum-entropy deconvolution. The accuracy in the atom position measurement depends on the validity of the incoherent imaging approximation, in which an ADF image is described as the convolution between the incident probe profile and scattering objects. Although the qualitative interpretation of ADF image contrast is possible for a wide range of specimen thicknesses, the direct observation of a crystal structure with deep-sub-angstrom accuracy requires a thin specimen (e.g., 10nm), as well as observation of the structure image by conventional high-resolution transmission electron microscopy.


Nature Communications | 2014

Biskyrmion states and their current-driven motion in a layered manganite

Xiuzhen Yu; Yusuke Tokunaga; Y. Kaneko; Weizhu Zhang; Koji Kimoto; Yoshio Matsui; Y. Taguchi; Yoshinori Tokura

The magnetic skyrmion is a topologically stable spin texture in which the constituent spins point to all the directions wrapping a sphere. Generation and control of nanometric magnetic skyrmions have large potential, for example, reduced power consumption, in spintronics device applications. Here we show the real-space observation of a biskyrmion, as defined by a molecular form of two bound skyrmions with the total topological charge of 2, realized under magnetic field applied normal to a thin plate of a bilayered manganite with centrosymmetric structure. In terms of a Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM), we have observed a distorted-triangle lattice of biskyrmion crystal, each composed of two bound skyrmions with oppositely swirling spins (magnetic helicities). Furthermore, we demonstrate that these biskyrmions can be electrically driven with orders of magnitude lower current density (<10(8) A m(-2)) than that for the conventional ferromagnetic domain walls.

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Koji Kimoto

National Institute for Materials Science

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Yoshio Matsui

National Institute for Materials Science

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Toru Asaka

Nagoya Institute of Technology

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Y. Kaneko

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Takuro Nagai

National Institute for Materials Science

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