Non-destructive generation of nano-scale periodic pinning potentials for magnetic domain walls: a way to bias domain wall propagation

POSTER

Abstract

The stray magnetic field of an array of ferromagnetic nanodots is used to generate a spatially periodic pinning potential for domain walls moving through a physically separate, weakly disordered, magnetic layer lying beneath the array. This technique represents a non-destructive method to create tunable and localised pinning sites for domain walls which are consequently subject to co-existing (but independent) periodic and disordered pinning potentials. Beyond the fundamentally attractive application of creating a model experimental system to study interface motion through multiple co-existing pinning potentials, our system interestingly exhibits many characteristics that are normally associated with exchange bias. This is a direct result of the fact that pinning effects induced by the periodic pinning potential depend upon the polarity of the applied magnetic field which drives the domain wall motion, a phenomenon which manifests itself in field-polarity-dependent domain wall mobilities and profiles.

Authors

  • Peter Metaxas

    • Unite Mixte de Physique CNRS/Thales, France
    • School of Physics, University of Western Australia
    • University of Western Australia
  • Pierre-Jean Zermatten

    • Spintec, Grenoble, France
  • Rafael Novak

    • Labo. de Phys. des Solides, CNRS/Universite Paris-Sud 11, France
  • Jean-Pierre Jamet

    • Labo. de Phys. des Solides, CNRS/Universite Paris-Sud 11, France
  • Raphael Weil

    • Labo. de Phys. des Solides, CNRS/Universite Paris-Sud 11, France
  • Stanislas Rohart

    • Labo. de Phys. des Solides, CNRS/Universite Paris-Sud 11, France
  • Jacques Ferre

    • Labo. de Phys. des Solides, CNRS/Universite Paris-Sud 11, France
  • Alexandra Mougin

    • Labo. de Phys. des Solides, CNRS/Universite Paris-Sud 11, France
  • Robert Stamps

    • School of Physics, University of Western Australia and SUPA - School of Physics and Astronomy, Uni. Glasgow, UK.
  • Vincent Baltz

    • Spintec, Grenoble, France
  • Bernard Rodmacq

    • Spintec, Grenoble, France
  • Gilles Gaudin

    • Spintec, Grenoble, France