Atomic antiferromagnetic domain wall propagation beyond the relativistic limit
ORAL
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the dynamics of atomic domain walls (DWs) in antiferromagnets driven by a spin-orbit field. For a DW with a width of a few lattice constants, we identify a Peierls-like pinning effect, with the depinning field exponentially decaying with the DW width, so that a spin-orbit field moderately larger than the threshold can drive the propagation of an atomic DW in a stepwise manner. For a broad DW, the Peierls pinning is negligibly small. However, the external spin-orbit field can induce a fast DW propagation, accompanied by a significant shrinking of its width down to atomic scales. Before stepping into the pinning region, noticeable spin waves are emitted at the tail of the DW. The spin-wave emission event not only broadens the effective width of the DW but also pushes the DW velocity over the magnonic barrier, which is generally believed to be the relativistic limit of the DW speed. While the existing dynamic theory based on the continuum approximation fails in the atomic scale, we develop an energy conversion theory to interpret the DW dynamics beyond the relativistic limit.
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Presenters
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Huanhuan Yang
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
Authors
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Huanhuan Yang
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
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Huaiyang Yuan
Southern University of Science and Technology
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Ming Yan
Shanghai University
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H. W. Zhang
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
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Peng Yan
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China