Abstract

Current-induced magnetization switching driven by spin–orbit torques on sub-nanosecond timescales could be used to create fast and low-power spintronic devices. The time-resolved detection and analysis of switching trajectories in ferromagnet/antiferromagnet exchange-biased structures are the key to designing spin–orbit torque devices with high speed, but insight remains limited. Here we report the time-resolved detection of spin–orbit torque switching of the magnetization and exchange bias in platinum/cobalt/iridium–manganese heterostructures. Using time-resolved magneto-optical Kerr microscopy, combined with micromagnetic simulations, we show that the ferromagnets, as well as interfacial antiferromagnetic spins and exchange bias, can be partially switched by sub-nanosecond current pulses, which allows the switching probabilities to be flexibly controlled at multiple levels. We also show that the spin–orbit-torque-induced switching of the exchange bias, which intimately depends on the current density, can stabilize multilevelled magnetization switching within sub-nanosecond current pulses.

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