Author:
Sander A.,Orfila G.,Sanchez-Manzano D.,Reyren N.,Mawass M. A.,Gallego F.,Collin S.,Bouzehouane K.,Höflich K.,Kronast F.,Grilli F.,Rivera-Calzada A.,Santamaria J.,Villegas J. E.,Valencia S.
Abstract
AbstractResearch on proximity effects in superconductor/ferromagnetic hybrids has most often focused on how superconducting properties are affected—and can be controlled—by the effects of the ferromagnet’s exchange or magnetic fringe fields. The opposite, namely the possibility to craft, tailor and stabilize the magnetic texture in a ferromagnet by exploiting superconducting effects, has been more seldom explored. Here we show that the magnetic flux trapped in high-temperature superconducting YBa2Cu3O7-δ microstructures can be used to modify the magnetic reversal of a hard ferromagnet—a cobalt/platinum multilayer with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy—and to imprint unusual magnetic domain distributions in a controlled manner via the magnetic field history. The domain distributions imprinted in the superconducting state remain stable, in absence of an external magnetic field, even after increasing the temperature well above the superconducting critical temperature, at variance to what has been observed for soft ferromagnets with in-plane magnetic anisotropy. This opens the possibility of having non-trivial magnetic configuration textures at room temperature after being tailored below the superconducting transition temperature. The observed effects are well explained by micromagnetic simulations that demonstrate the role played by the magnetic field from the superconductor on the nucleation, propagation, and stabilization of magnetic domains.
Funder
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
European Cooperation in Science and Technology
ERC
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie GmbH
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
6 articles.
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