Abstract
Achieving control over magnon spin currents in insulating magnets - where dissipation due to Joule heating is highly suppressed - is an active area of research that could lead to energy-efficient spintronics applications. However, magnon spin currents supported by conventional systems with uniform magnetic order have proven hard to control. An alternative approach that relies on topologically protected magnonic edge states of spatially periodic magnetic textures has recently emerged. A prime example of such textures is the ferromagnetic skyrmion crystal which hosts chiral edge states providing a platform for magnon spin currents. Here, we show, for the first time, an external magnetic field can drive a topological phase transition in the spin wave spectrum of a ferromagnetic skyrmion crystal. The topological phase transition is signaled by the closing of a low-energy bulk magnon gap at a critical field. In the topological phase, below the critical field, two topologically protected chiral magnonic edge states lie within this gap, but they unravel in the trivial phase, above the critical field. Remarkably, the topological phase transition involves an inversion of two magnon bands that at the $\Gamma$ point correspond to the breathing and anticlockwise modes of the skyrmions in the crystal. Our findings suggest that an external magnetic field could be used as a knob to switch on and off magnon spin currents carried by topologically protected chiral magnonic edge states.
Highlights
A major obstacle to meeting the demand for ever smaller logic and storage devices, based on expectations set by Moore’s law, is the pernicious effect of Joule heating [1]
Our findings suggest that an external magnetic field could be used as a knob to switch on and off magnon spin currents carried by topologically protected chiral magnonic edge states
The magnetic texture of AFM SkXs is comprised of three interpenetrating sublattices where each one of them orders as a FM SkX
Summary
A major obstacle to meeting the demand for ever smaller logic and storage devices, based on expectations set by Moore’s law, is the pernicious effect of Joule heating [1]. Their low-energy spinwave modes have been investigated before [24,25,26,27], only recently were they predicted to host chiral magnonic edge states protected by the nontrivial topology of their bulk magnon bands [28]. We discover that there is a window of magnetic-field values where such a phase transition between two topologically distinct spin-wave spectra of the FM SkX can be observed It involves two low-energy bulk magnon bands, which at the point correspond to the counterclockwise and breathing modes [26]. Magnetic field could be used to control the propagation of robust magnon spin currents with a defined directionality along the edge of FM SkXs in thin films
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