Domain walls on the fast track
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0055
Magnetic moments don’t necessarily point in the same direction everywhere in a ferromagnet. More often, domains of different orientations coexist, separated by thin domain walls. Moving those walls with spin-polarized current is potentially a convenient way to write bits to magnetic random-access memory or to shuttle sequences of bits to and fro in three-dimensional memory devices. But such applications require that domain walls be moved quickly and with minimal current. Unfortunately, the materials best suited to yield such highly mobile domain walls are also the most susceptible to Walker breakdown, a turbulence-triggering instability that slows domain-wall speeds to a crawl. Now, researchers led by Gilles Gaudin and Ioan Mihai Miron of Spintec laboratory