Dislocation-Driven Relaxation Processes at the Conical to Helical Phase Transition in FeGe
Abstract
The formation of topological spin textures at the nanoscale has a significant impact on the long-range order and dynamical response of magnetic materials. We study the relaxation mechanisms at the conical-To-helical phase transition in the chiral magnet FeGe. By combining macroscopic ac susceptibility measurement, surface-sensitive magnetic force microscopy, and micromagnetic simulations, we demonstrate how the motion of magnetic topological defects, here edge dislocations, impacts the local formation of a stable helimagnetic spin structure. Although the simulations show that the edge dislocations can move with a velocity up to 100 m/s through the helimagnetic background, their dynamics are observed to disturb the magnetic order on the time scale of minutes due to randomly distributed pinning sites. The results corroborate the substantial impact of dislocation motions on the nanoscale spin structure in chiral magnets, revealing previously hidden effects on the formation of helimagnetic domains and domain walls. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
ACS NanoVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Chemical SocietySubject
Topological spin textures; Edge dislocation; Magnetic relaxation process; Chiral magnet; FeGeFunding
149192 - Functional active defects in condensed-matter systems (SNF)
137520 - Ultra-sensitive magnetometry with single spins in diamond: Device fabrication, spin manipulation, and application to nanoscale imaging (SNF)
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