- Shao, Qiming;
- Liu, Yawen;
- Yu, Guoqiang;
- Kim, Se Kwon;
- Che, Xiaoyu;
- Tang, Chi;
- He, Qing Lin;
- Tserkovnyak, Yaroslav;
- Shi, Jing;
- Wang, Kang L
Non-volatile memory and computing technology rely on efficient read and write
of ultra-tiny information carriers that do not wear out. Magnetic skyrmions are
emerging as a potential carrier since they are topologically robust nanoscale
spin textures that can be manipulated with ultralow current density. To date,
most of skyrmions are reported in metallic films, which suffer from additional
Ohmic loss and thus high energy dissipation. Therefore, skyrmions in magnetic
insulators are of technological importance for low-power information processing
applications due to their low damping and the absence of Ohmic loss. Moreover,
they attract fundamental interest in studying various magnon-skyrmion
interactions11. Skyrmions have been observed in one insulating material
Cu2OSeO3 at cryogenic temperatures, where they are stabilized by bulk
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. Here, we report the observation of magnetic
skyrmions that survive above room temperature in magnetic insulator/heavy metal
heterostructures, i.e., thulium iron garnet/platinum. The presence of these
skyrmions results from the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction at the interface
and is identified by the emergent topological Hall effect. Through tuning the
magnetic anisotropy via varying temperature, we observe skyrmions in a large
window of external magnetic field and enhanced stability of skyrmions in the
easy-plane anisotropy regime. Our results will help create a new platform for
insulating skyrmion-based room temperature low dissipation spintronic
applications.