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Diameter-independent skyrmion Hall angle observed in chiral magnetic multilayers.

Katharina ZeisslerSimone FinizioCraig BartonAlexandra J HuxtableJamie MasseyJürgen LindnerAlexandr V SadovnikovSergey A NikitovRichard BreartonThorsten HesjedalGerrit van der LaanMark C RosamondEdmund Harold LinfieldGavin BurnellChristopher H Marrows
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Magnetic skyrmions are topologically non-trivial nanoscale objects. Their topology, which originates in their chiral domain wall winding, governs their unique response to a motion-inducing force. When subjected to an electrical current, the chiral winding of the spin texture leads to a deflection of the skyrmion trajectory, characterised by an angle with respect to the applied force direction. This skyrmion Hall angle is predicted to be skyrmion diameter-dependent. In contrast, our experimental study finds that the skyrmion Hall angle is diameter-independent for skyrmions with diameters ranging from 35 to 825 nm. At an average velocity of 6 ± 1 ms-1, the average skyrmion Hall angle was measured to be 9° ± 2°. In fact, the skyrmion dynamics is dominated by the local energy landscape such as materials defects and the local magnetic configuration.
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