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Antiskyrmions and their electrical footprint in crystalline mesoscale structures of Mn1.4PtSn

2022, Winter, Moritz, Goncalves, Francisco J. T., Soldatov, Ivan, He, Yangkun, Zúñiga Céspedes, Belén E., Milde, Peter, Lenz, Kilian, Hamann, Sandra, Uhlarz, Marc, Vir, Praveen, König, Markus, Moll, Philip J. W., Schlitz, Richard, Goennenwein, Sebastian T. B., Eng, Lukas M., Schäfer, Rudolf, Wosnitza, Joachim, Felser, Claudia, Gayles, Jacob, Helm, Toni

Skyrmionic materials hold the potential for future information technologies, such as racetrack memories. Key to that advancement are systems that exhibit high tunability and scalability, with stored information being easy to read and write by means of all-electrical techniques. Topological magnetic excitations such as skyrmions and antiskyrmions, give rise to a characteristic topological Hall effect. However, the electrical detection of antiskyrmions, in both thin films and bulk samples has been challenging to date. Here, we apply magneto-optical microscopy combined with electrical transport to explore the antiskyrmion phase as it emerges in crystalline mesoscale structures of the Heusler magnet Mn1.4PtSn. We reveal the Hall signature of antiskyrmions in line with our theoretical model, comprising anomalous and topological components. We examine its dependence on the vertical device thickness, field orientation, and temperature. Our atomistic simulations and experimental anisotropy studies demonstrate the link between antiskyrmions and a complex magnetism that consists of competing ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, and chiral exchange interactions, not captured by micromagnetic simulations.

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Inductive heating using a high-magnetic-field pulse to initiate chemical reactions to generate composite materials

2019, Zimmerer, Cordelia, Salazar Mejia, Catalina, Utech, Toni, Arnhold, Kerstin, Janke, Andreas, Wosnitza, Joachim

Induction heating is efficient, precise, cost-effective, and clean. The heating process is coupled to an electrically conducting material, usually a metal. As most polymers are dielectric and non-conducting, induction heating is not applicable. In order to transfer energy from an electromagnetic field into polymer induction structures, conducting materials or materials that absorb the radiation are required. This report gives a brief overview of induction heating processes used in polymer technology. In contrast to metals, most polymer materials are not affected by electromagnetic fields. However, an unwanted temperature rise of the polymer can occur when a radio frequency field is applied. The now available high-field magnetic sources provide a new platform for induction heating at very low frequencies, avoiding unwanted thermal effects within the material. Using polycarbonate and octadecylamine as an example, it is demonstrated that induction heating performed by a magnetic-field pulse with a maximum flux density of 59 T can be used to initiate chemical reactions. A 50 nm thick Ag loop, with a mean diameter of 7 mm, placed in the polymer-polymer interface acts as susceptor and a resistive heating element. The formation of urethane as a linker compound was examined by infrared spectroscopic imaging and differential scanning calorimetry.

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Improved accuracy in high-frequency AC transport measurements in pulsed high magnetic fields

2020, Mitamura, Hiroyuki, Watanuki, Ryuta, Kampert, Erik, Förster, Tobias, Matsuo, Akira, Onimaru, Takahiro, Onozaki, Norimichi, Amou, Yuta, Wakiya, Kazuhei, Yamamoto, Isao, Matsumoto, Keisuke T., Suzuki, Kazuya, Zherlitsyn, Sergei, Wosnitza, Joachim, Tokunaga, Masashi, Kindo, Koichi, Sakakibara, Toshiro

We show theoretically and experimentally that accurate transport measurements are possible even within the short time provided by pulsed magnetic fields. For this purpose, a new method has been devised, which removes the noise component of a specific frequency from the signal by taking a linear combination of the results of numerical phase detection using multiple integer periods. We also established a method to unambiguously determine the phase rotation angle in AC transport measurements using a frequency range of tens of kilohertz. We revealed that the dominant noise in low-frequency transport measurements in pulsed magnetic fields is the electromagnetic induction caused by mechanical vibrations of wire loops in inhomogeneous magnetic fields. These results strongly suggest that accurate transport measurements in short-pulsed magnets are possible when mechanical vibrations are well suppressed. © 2020 Author(s).