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Magneto-Seebeck microscopy of domain switching in collinear antiferromagnet CuMnAs

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2020

Abstract

Antiferromagnets offer spintronic device characteristics unparalleled in ferromagnets owing to their lack of stray fields, THz spin dynamics, and rich materials landscape. Microscopic imaging of antiferromagnetic domains is one of the key prerequisites for understanding physical principles of the device operation.

However, adapting common magnetometry techniques to the dipolar-field-free antiferromagnets has been a major challenge. Here we demonstrate in a collinear antiferromagnet a thermoelectric detection method by combining the magneto-Seebeck effect with local heat gradients generated by scanning far-field or near-field techniques.

In a 20-nm epilayer of uniaxial CuMnAs we observe reversible 180 degrees switching of the Ned vector via domain wall displacement, controlled by the polarity of the current pulses. We also image polarity-dependent 90 degrees switching of the Ned vector in a thicker biaxial film, and domain shattering induced at higher pulse amplitudes.

The antiferromagnetic domain maps obtained by our laboratory technique are compared to measurements by the established synchrotron-based technique of x-ray photoemission electron microscopy using x-ray magnetic linear dichroism.