AI Article Synopsis

  • The magnetic skyrmion strings in MnSi form a lattice structure and can stretch through a significant thickness of the material (10-1000 μm).
  • Upon applying strong pulsed currents (3-5 x 10 A/m), rather than just moving, these skyrmion strings undergo a process called topological unwinding.
  • The study finds that the critical current density needed for this effect increases with shorter pulse widths, and simulations suggest that the unwinding is triggered by the depinning of already segmented skyrmion strings.

Article Abstract

In the MnSi bulk chiral magnet, magnetic skyrmion strings of 17 nm in diameter appear in the form of a lattice, penetrating the sample thickness, 10-1000 μm. Although such a bundle of skyrmion strings may exhibit complex soft-matter-like dynamics when starting to move under the influence of a random pinning potential, the details remain highly elusive. Here, we show that a metastable skyrmion-string lattice is subject to topological unwinding under the application of pulsed currents of 3-5 × 10 A m rather than being transported, as evidenced by measurements of the topological Hall effect. The critical current density above which the topological unwinding occurs is larger for a shorter pulse width, reminiscent of the viscoelastic characteristics accompanying the pinning-creep transition observed in domain-wall motion. Numerical simulations reveal that current-induced depinning of already segmented skyrmion strings initiates the topological unwinding. Thus, the skyrmion-string length is an element to consider when studying current-induced motion.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5673897PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-01353-2DOI Listing

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