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Antiferromagnets offer considerable potential for electronic device applications. This article reviews recent demonstrations of spin manipulation in antiferromagnetic devices using applied electrical currents. Due to spin–orbit coupling in environments with particular crystalline or structural symmetries, the electric current can induce an effective magnetic field with a sign that alternates on the lengthscale of the unit cell. The staggered effective field provides an efficient mechanism for switching antiferromagnetic domains and moving antiferromagnetic domain walls, with writing speeds in the terahertz regime.
The development of spintronic devices based on ferromagnetic (FM) metals has had a huge impact on information and communication technologies. Since the introduction of thin film magnetoresistive read heads in the mid-1990s, hard disk storage capacities have increased by several orders of magnitude. Ferromagnetic tunnel junctions form the bits of magnetic random access memories (MRAM), which offer advantages of nonvolatility, stability, and high speed compared to competing semiconductor-based technologies. Antiferromagnetic (AF) materials, in which the local magnetic moment vectors of neighbouring atoms sum to zero, play a key, albeit passive, role in such devices: exchange coupling at the interface between FM and AF layers causes the FM layer to become stable against external magnetic fields, providing a fixed reference layer in a spin-valve structure. This important application has stimulated extensive research over the last two decades on exchange bias and other interface-induced phenomena at FM–AF interfaces.[1]
AF materials have not yet found application as active components in spintronic devices, for two principal reasons. Firstly, the cancellation of neighbouring magnetic moments results in zero stray magnetic field, making their magnetic properties hard to measure. Secondly, AF materials are insensitive to external fields of typically several tesla, making them hard to control. However, neither the stray magnetic field nor the sensitivity of external magnetic fields of FM layers are used in modern MRAM devices: information is read electrically using tunnel magnetoresistance, and electrical current-induced spin torques provide the writing mechanism. Therefore, these historic advantages of FM materials actually become a hindrance in MRAM, as the stray fields must be compensated to prevent unwanted cross-talk between neighbouring magnetic elements. It has been demonstrated that large tunnelling anisotropic magnetoresistance can be observed in tunnel junctions with an AF layer as the active element,[2] providing an important proof of the principle that AF materials can provide the required electrical readout signals in a memory device. The recent demonstrations of electrical control of AF order,[3–12] described in detail in the present review article, firmly establish the prospects for fully readable and writable AF devices.
Antiferromagnets offer a further important advantage over ferromagnets for spintronic device applications, in terms of the speed of operation. The limiting timescale for writing the magnetization state is set by the magnetic resonance frequency, which is of the order of GHz in FM materials. On the other hand, the resonance frequency in AF materials is enhanced by the strong antiparallel coupling of neighbouring moments, and is typically in the THz range.[13] Hence, rapid reorientation of AF moments on a timescale of a few picoseconds is possible.[14]
This article presents a focussed review of recent demonstrations of electrical switching in AF thin films using current-induced spin–orbit torques. For wider reviews of the rapidly developing field of AF spintronics, including spin transport, dynamical properties, opto-spintronics, and topological effects, the reader is referred to the recent focus issue of Nature Physics[15] and other recent extensive reviews.[16,17] In the present review, section
In systems with broken inversion symmetry, due to spin–orbit coupling the carrier momentum is correlated with the spin angular momentum; carriers propagating in opposite directions through the crystal lattice will have the opposite direction of spin polarization. Hence, an electric current can induce a non-equilibrium spin polarization which, in a magnetic material, can induce a torque on the local magnetic moments. As illustrated in Fig.
In an antiferromagnet, a current-induced spin polarization due to inversion asymmetry can in principle act on the local magnetic moments through the same mechanisms as in ferromagnets. In the case of a field-like SOT in an AF material (Fig.
The extra degree of freedom offered by the magnetic sublattice symmetry in AFs enables a type of SOT which does not have a direct counterpart in FMs. For a centrosymmetric crystal, the net spin polarization generated by an electrical current is zero. However, the local spin polarization is determined by the symmetry of the individual atomic sites, rather than the global crystal symmetry.[30] If the magnetic sublattices of an AF are inversion partners of a centrosymmetric crystal, an electric current can induce a local spin polarization, which alternates in sign between the two sublattices (Fig.
Current-induced motion of antiferromagnetic domain walls has been investigated both for damping-like torques[34] and Néel-order field-like torques.[35] A common feature of both studies is that the speed of the domain wall motion can be much larger in AFs than in FMs. In an FM material, the domain wall speed is limited by the so-called Walker breakdown, where the wall motion changes from a steady flow to an oscillatory behavior associated with the precession of the wall magnetization.[36] In an AF material, the precession is opposed by the strong inter-sublattice exchange coupling, and the wall speed is limited only by the (much larger) spin wave velocity. Hence, speeds of several 10 s of km/s are predicted, compared to limiting speeds of typically 10 m/s–100 m/s for FM walls.[35] The antiferromagnetic exchange coupling also results in a very small domain wall inertia, favouring current-induced domain wall motion for ultra-short (∼ps) current pulses.[35]
The tetragonal phase of the collinear antiferromagnet CuMnAs has the magnetic structure shown in Fig.
The stable bulk phase of CuMnAs has an orthorhombic structure,[38,39] but the tetragonal phase can be stabilized by epitaxial growth on III–V semiconductor substrates.[40] The ab plane is lattice-matched to the substrate through a 45° rotation as illustrated in Fig.
The bulk and interface structure has a marked effect on the AF order. For CuMnAs films of thickness
With increasing thickness, the uniaxial interface anisotropy becomes progressively less important, and the tetragonal anisotropy of the bulk crystal becomes dominant. However, the magnetic domain microstructure, measured using x-ray photoemission electron microscopy (XPEEM), is strongly dependent on the substrate. For CuMnAs films grown on GaAs(001), an inhomogeneous AF domain structure is observed (Fig.
Recent theoretical studies have shown that the orthorhombic phase of CuMnAs also possesses a lattice symmetry favouring efficient switching by NSOT.[43] Moreover, the lower symmetry of this structure is predicted to favour a Dirac semimetallic band structure at the Fermi level,[43,44] opening up the intriguing possibility of combining antiferromagnetic spintronics with topological Dirac physics. However, growth of orthorhombic CuMnAs thin films has not yet been reported, to our knowledge.
The experimental geometry used in the first demonstration of current-induced switching in CuMnAs is shown in Fig.
The current-induced switching of AF domains into the NSOT effective field direction was confirmed by XPEEM imaging.[4] For an 80-nm thick CuMnAs layer on GaAs(001), the AF moments were shown to be, on average, rotated to be perpendicular to the direction of the current pulse. A clear correlation was observed between the average spin orientation and the anisotropy of the electrical resistance, measured in situ after each pulse. However, the observed switching was found to be inhomogeneous at the submicron scale. Small localized regions were found to consistently and reversibly switch with each current pulse, while other regions switch erratically or not at all. This is indicative of a stochastic process, highlighting the important role of thermal fluctuations and a distribution of domain wall pinning centres.
As can be seen in Fig.
The switching due to current induced by THz radiation relies on the fact that an electrical readout signal depends on the axis of the applied current pulse but not the polarity. Changing the polarity of the pulse reverses the sign of the spin–orbit torque, but the readout described by Eq. (
Current-induced switching of 180° domains was recently demonstrated using a novel phase-sensitive detection technique.[8] The technique relies on the fact that the current-induced local non-equilibrium spin polarization has opposite signs on the two magnetic sublattices. A current applied parallel to the uniaxial easy axis results in a transient rotation of the local moments towards the direction of the Néel-order effective magnetic field (Fig.
The existence of current-induced Néel-order fields was first predicted for Mn2Au, a collinear AF in which, as with CuMnAs, the Mn magnetic sublattices are inversion partners in an otherwise centrosymmetric crystal.[31] Its high magnetic ordering temperature, well above 1000 K, makes this a promising material for spintronics applications.[46] Using a similar geometry to the one shown in Fig.
Zhou et al. investigated the NSOT-induced switching in Mn2Au with the current applied along different crystal axes.[11] By growth on either MgO(111), MgO(110), or SrTiO3(100) substrates, Mn2Au films with (103), (204), and (101) were obtained. The different switching behaviors observed for each film, combined with x-ray measurements of the crystal anisotropy, indicate that the AF moments are switched between the easy [010] and [100] axes, the latter of which lies out of the plane. The observed orientation-dependent NSOT points to the important role of the magnetocrystalline anisotropy in the current-induced switching process.
AF domain images obtained using XPEEM also indicate a substantial magnetocrystalline anisotropy in Mn2Au films.[47] Measurements of as-prepared Mn2Au(001) films revealed a biaxial magnetic anisotropy, with approximately equal populations of domains with spin oriented along the in-plane [110] and
THz spectroscopy measurements of Mn2Au films revealed a strong mode near 1 THz, ascribed to a resonant in-plane oscillation of the AF coupled magnetic moments.[48] The absorption strength of the AF magnetic resonance is some 3 orders of magnitude larger than in insulating AF materials such as NiO, where the magnetic field component of the THz pulse drives the oscillation. In Mn2Au, due to the broken local inversion symmetry, the electric component of the pulse induces a Néel-order effective magnetic field, which can account for the observed strong AF magnetic resonance.
Current-induced switching behavior was also demonstrated in bilayer films of Pt(5 nm)/NiO(5 nm).[12] While the measurement geometry as well as the critical current densities were similar to the earlier studies of CuMnAs[3] and Mn2Au,[9,10] there are crucial differences in the underlying mechanism. Firstly, the longitudinal and transverse resistance changes were ascribed to the spin Hall magnetoresistance effect in the Pt layer.[49] More importantly, the NiO film does not possess the broken sublattice inversion symmetry required for a Néel-order field-like torque. Instead, the switching is ascribed to the damping-like torque due non-equilibrium spin polarization generated in the Pt layer. The opposite sign of the resistance change in Pt/NiO compared to Mn2Au is consistent with this, and indicates that the AF-coupled local moments tend to switch into the axis of the current pulse. Some aspects of the observed switching behavior are unclear, particularly the role of the AF domain microstructure in the quasiepitaxial NiO(001) film. However, the observed switching in a heavy-metal/AF bilayer points to a host of new possibilities for current-induced manipulation and high speed dynamics in AF thin films, without the requirement for a particular crystal symmetry.
Table
The recent rapid growth and development of antiferromagnetic spintronics is in large part associated with the discovery and demonstration of electrical switching in CuMnAs using NSOT. This offers an efficient and reversible method to control AF coupled spins, providing new possibilities for manipulating AF domains and domain walls and understanding their dynamical properties. Since then the demonstration of reproducible multi-level switching and response to terahertz pulses opens a pathway to applications in fields such as ultrafast processing and neuromorphic logic.
The demonstration of electrical current control in other AF material systems has broadened the material base for AF spintronics. Particularly the demonstration of switching in bilayer films, which are not limited by the same symmetry constraints, opens a new plethora of potential AF material systems.
Obstacles to application certainly exist and include the small size of the read-out signal using ohmic anisotropic magnetoresistance. The further development of AF tunneling anisotropic magnetoresistance structures would be of huge benefit. Another predicted property of some AF materials, including CuMnAs, could help to remedy this in a novel way. The predictions of the existence of a topological metal-insulator transition linked to the magnetic order[42] could provide a means of producing a large readout signal. As of yet the existence of this transition has not been demonstrated.
A further obstacle to application is the lack of understanding of what dictates the domain formation in these materials. The ability to tailor the domain size and anisotropies would allow one to design stable, single domain memory devices as well as to electrically manipulate individual AF domain walls. This would enable future spintronic devices utilizing AF domain wall motion induced by ultrafast current pulses.
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