Néel vector switching in enhanced-<i>T</i><sub>N</sub> magnetoelectric thin films

ORAL

Abstract

Controlling magnetism by electrical means is a key challenge in the field of spintronics and essential for energy efficient devices in computing. Voltage-controlled switching of magnetization is manifested through boundary magnetization in Cr2O3 and promises non-volatile spintronic memory and logic devices. In pure Cr2O3, switching of the state variable takes place through magnetoelectric reversal of the Néel vector but the operation is limited to T< 307 K. In contrast, in B-doped Cr2O3, toggling of antiferromagnetic states is demonstrated in zero magnetic field between 300 and 400K. Various mechanisms including concentration dependent TN-enhancement, voltage-controlled anisotropy, spin-canting, and a Néel spin orbit torque are simultaneously activated.Our results demonstrate that B-doping turns magnetoelectric Cr2O3 into a high-TN, multi-functional material with electrically switchable Néel vector enabling CMOS compatible ultra-low power antiferromagnetic spintronics which operates in zero magnetic field.

*This work was supported in part by the MURI program, by nCORE, a subsidiary of the SRC, by AMML and NSF, and by MRSEC. The research was performed in part in the Nebraska Nanoscale Facility, and NCMN which are supported by the NSF and the Nebraska Research Initiative.

Presenters

  • Ather Mahmood

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Authors

  • Ather Mahmood

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln
  • Will Echtenkamp

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln
  • Junlei Wang

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln
  • Christian Binek

    • University of Nebraska - Lincoln