Abstract

Magnetic skyrmionium is a skyrmionlike spin texture with nanoscale size and high mobility. It is a topologically trivial but dynamically stable structure, which can be used as a nonvolatile information carrier for next-generation spintronic storage and computing devices. Here we study the dynamics of a skyrmionium driven by the spin torque in a ferrimagnetic nanotrack. It is found that the direction of motion is jointly determined by the internal configuration of a skyrmionium and the spin polarization vector. Besides, the deformation of a skyrmionium induced by the intrinsic skyrmion Hall effect depends on both the magnitude of the driving force and the net angular momentum. The ferrimagnetic skyrmionium is most robust at the angular momentum compensation point, whose dynamics is quite similar to the skyrmionium in antiferromagnet. The skyrmion Hall effect is perfectly prohibited, where it is possible to observe the position of the skyrmionium by measuring the magnetization. Furthermore, the current-induced dynamics of a ferrimagnetic skyrmionium is compared with that of a ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic skyrmionium. We also make a comparison between the motion of a ferrimagnetic skyrmionium and a skyrmion. Our results will open a new field of ferrimagnetic skyrmioniums for future development of ferrimagnetic spintronics devices.

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