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Antiferromagnetic Bloch line driven by spin current - an analog of a fluxon in a long Josephson junction

ORAL

Abstract

Antiferromagnets (AFMs) are promising for future high-frequency field-free spintronic applications [1-4]. Self-localized spin structures can substantially enrich this scope and endow new functionalities to AFM-based devices [5]. A domain wall (DW) is a topological soliton that bridges a connection between two ground states, similar to a link in a Josephson junction (JJ) between two superconductors.

We demonstrate that a DW in a bi-axial AFM with the easy-axis type of primary anisotropy and driven by a spin current is a close analogue of a long Josephson junction and the Bloch line is a close analogue to the fluxon state. Thus, the dynamics of the Néel vector inside the DW (Josephson phase Φ) is described by a sine-Gordon type of equation, where applied spin-transfer torque represents a bias current through the junction, anisotropy in a basal plane defines a plasma frequency, and characteristic speed of magnons, defined by nonhomogeneous exchange energy, corresponds to the Swihart velocity.

References:

[1] T. Jungwirth et al. Nat. Nanotech 11, 231 (2016)

[2] R. Khymyn et al., Sci. Rep. 7, 43705 (2017)

[3] O. Sulymenko et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 8, 064007 (2017)

[4] V. Puliafito et al., Physical Review B 99, 024405 (2019)

[5] O. Gomonay et al., Nat. Phys. 14, 213 (2018)

Presenters

  • Roman Ovcharov

    University of Gothenburg

Authors

  • Roman Ovcharov

    University of Gothenburg

  • Roman Khymyn

    University of Gothenburg, Sweden, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden

  • Boris Ivanov

    Institute of Magnetism, NASU and MESU of Ukraine, Institute of Magnetism, Kiev, Institute of Magnetism of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine

  • Johan Åkerman

    Goteborg Univ, University of Gothenburg, 1Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 41296 Gothenburg, Sweden., University of Gothenburg, Sweden, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, Physics Department, University of Gothenburg, 412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden