IEEE Magnetics Society 2025-2026 Distinguished Lecturer
Tailoring Magnetic Spin Textures in La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 – Based Micromagnets
By, Prof. Yayoi Takamura, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Davis, USA
Date: Wednesday 12th November, 2025. 12:00 h
Vanue: Sala de Graus Eduard Fontserè. Facultat de Física
Abstract: The development of next-generation computing devices based on spintronics and magnonics requires an understanding of how magnetic spin textures can be tailored in patterned magnetic materials. Within the wide range of magnetic materials available, complex oxides such as ferromagnetic (FM) La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 (LSMO) and antiferromagnetic (AF) La1-xSrxFeO3 (LSFO) provide an ideal platform for tailoring magnetic spin textures when lithographically patterned as nano/micromagnets. This unique tunability arises due to the strong interactions among charge, spin, lattice, and orbital degrees of freedom. In this talk I demonstrate how an intricate interplay exists between shape and magnetocrystalline anisotropy energies as well as exchange coupling interactions at LSMO/LSFO interfaces. Therefore, the resulting AF and FM spin textures can be controlled using parameters such as the LSMO and LSFO layer thicknesses, micromagnet shape, and temperature. These spin textures are imaged using x-ray photoemission electron microscopy for a variety of shapes (circles, squares, triangles, and hexagons with their edges oriented along different low-index crystallographic directions) with and without their core regions removed (“donut structures”). LSMO nanomagnets are also patterned into artificial spin-ice (ASI) structures, where large arrays of nanomagnets are arranged in geometries where all the magnetic interactions cannot be satisfied simultaneously. While one might expect shape anisotropy to dictate Ising states in the nanomagnets, the unique combination of magnetic parameters associated with LSMO enables the formation of both Ising and complex spin textures (CSTs) based on the nano-island width and spacing. These CSTs consist of single and double vortices and alter the nature of dipolar coupling among nanomagnets, giving rise to exotic physics in the ASI lattices. These studies demonstrate that complex oxides provide a unique platform for engineering FM and AF spin textures for next-generation spin-based devices.
This event has received support from IN2UB Organization of Congresses and Invited Professors call, 2025

