The emergence of a topologically nontrivial vortex-like magnetic structure, the magnetic skyrmion, has launched new concepts for memory devices. Extensive studies have theoretically demonstrated the ability to encode information bits by using a chain of skyrmions in one-dimensional nanostripes. Here, we report experimental observation of the skyrmion chain in FeGe nanostripes by using high-resolution Lorentz transmission electron microscopy. Under an applied magnetic field, we observe that the helical ground states with distorted edge spins evolve into individual skyrmions, which assemble in the form of a chain at low field and move collectively into the interior of the nanostripes at elevated fields. Such a skyrmion chain survives even when the width of the nanostripe is much larger than the size of single skyrmion. This discovery demonstrates a way of skyrmion formation through the edge effect, and might, in the long term, shed light on potential applications.
A target Skyrmion is a flux-closed spin texture that has twofold degeneracy and is promising as a binary state in next generation universal memories. Although its formation in nanopatterned chiral magnets has been predicted, its observation has remained challenging. Here, we use off-axis electron holography to record images of target Skyrmions in a 160-nm-diameter nanodisk of the chiral magnet FeGe. We compare experimental measurements with numerical simulations, demonstrate switching between two stable degenerate target Skyrmion ground states that have opposite polarities and rotation senses, and discuss the observed switching mechanism.
A set of three-dimensional charge-density-wave (3D CDW) VSe2 nano-flakes with different thicknesses were obtained by the scotch tape-based micro-mechanical exfoliation method. Resistivity measurements showed that the 3D CDW transition temperature Tp decreases systematically from 105 K in bulk to 81.8 K in the 11.6 nm thick flake. The Hall resistivity ρxy of all the flakes showed a linear dependent behavior against the magnetic field with a residual electron concentration of the order of ∼1021 cm−3 at 5 K. The electron concentration n increases slightly as the thickness d decreases, possibly due to the CDW gap is reduced with the decrease of the thickness.
Magnetic skyrmion is a nanosized magnetic whirl with nontrivial topology, which is highly relevant for applications on future memory devices. To enable the applications, theoretical efforts have been made to understand the dynamics of individual skyrmions in magnetic nanostructures. However, directly imaging the evolution of highly geometrically confined individual skyrmions is challenging. Here, we report the magnetic field-driven dynamics of individual skyrmions in FeGe nanodisks with diameters on the order of several skyrmion sizes by using Lorentz transmission electron microscopy. In contrast to the conventional skyrmion lattice in bulk, a series of skyrmion cluster states with different geometrical configurations and the fielddriven cascading phase transitions are identified at temperatures far below the magnetic transition temperature. Furthermore, a dynamics, namely the intermittent jumps between the neighboring skyrmion cluster states, is found at elevated temperatures, at which the thermal energy competes with the energy barrier between the skyrmion cluster states.T he complex spin configurations in helimagnets have attracted considerable attention recently, with the topologically stable particle-like spin texture with a size down to the nanoscale, namely magnetic skyrmion, as the focus of interest (1). Magnetic skyrmion is characterized as a nanoscale topological particle producing unconventional spin electronic phenomena (2, 3) that holds great promise for future spintronic devices, including racetrack memory (4), magnetic random access memory, and magnetic sensors (1). Essentially, such schemes rely on the controllable formation and manipulation of individual skyrmions at nanostructured elements with various shapes such as disks, stripes, or wires (5-7). Investigation of skyrmions in confined geometries has therefore become one of the major topics in the field of skyrmion physics (5-10).Unlike ordinary magnetic vortices in microsized soft magnetic disks due to the minimization of the dipolar energy (11), the key ingredient of stabilizing skyrmions in helimagnets is the antisymmetry Dzyaloshinskii−Moriya (DM) interactions originating from the broken inversion symmetry (12). The competition of the DM coupling with ferromagnetic exchange interaction results in periodic helical ground state in helimagnets. Under the action of a magnetic field and temperature, these magnetic helices transfer into skyrmion crystal with triangular lattice configuration, and finally to the field-polarized ferromagnetic state. Notably, both ferromagnetic and DM couplings occur among the neighboring spins and belong to short-range interaction. Thus, it was demonstrated theoretically that skyrmions cluster states, characterized by certain arrangements of limited skyrmions, still persist even in submicrometer objects (8, 13). There, the longrange lattice form of skyrmions in 2D or bulk helimagnets is broken, but a short-ranged ordering with specific geometrical symmetries still remains, and the number of skyrmions in the cluster...
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an especially frequent malignancy in China. Radiofrequency ablation, percutaneous ethanol injection, transarterial chemoembolization, cryoablation, microwave coagulation, and laser-induced interstitial thermotherapy all offer potential local tumor control and occasionally achieve long-term disease-free survival. High-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), as a noninvasive therapy, can be applied to treat tumors that are difficult to treat with other techniques. The preliminary results of HIFU in clinical studies are encouraging. The aims of this investigation were to assess the efficacy of the system in obtaining necrosis of the target tissue and to determine whether HIFU ablation is hazardous to adjacent major blood vessels. Over 7 years, thirty-nine patients with HCC were enrolled in this investigation. The inferior vena cava (IVC), main hepatic vein branches, and the portal vein and its main branches were evaluated. The distance between tumor and main blood vessel was less than 1 cm in all these enrolled patients. Contrast-enhanced MRI was used to evaluate the perfusion of tumors and major blood vessels. We conducted HIFU ablation for the treatment of 39 patients with 42 tumors, with each tumor measuring 7.4+/-4.3 (1.5-22) cm in its greatest dimension. Among the 39 patients, 23 were males and 16 females. The average age was 53.2 years (range 25-77 years). Thirty-seven patients had a solitary lesion, one had two lesions, and the remaining one had three lesions. Nineteen lesions were located in the right lobe of liver, 18 in the left lobe, and 5 in both right and left lobes. Among the 42 tumors, 25 were adjacent to 1 blood vessel, 12 adjacent to 2 main vessels, 2 adjacent to 3 main vessels, and 1 adjacent to 4 main vessels. Twenty-one of the 42 tumors were completely ablated, while the rest of the tumors were ablated by more than 50% of lesion volume after one session of HIFU. No major blood vessel injury was observed in any subject after 23.8+/-17.2 months follow-up. HIFU can achieve complete tumor necrosis even when the lesion is located adjacent to the major hepatic blood vessels. Short-term and long-term follow-up results show that HIFU can be safely used to ablate the tumors adjacent to major vessels.
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging plays a highly important role in radiotherapy treatment planning for the segmentation of tumor volumes and organs. However, the use of MR is limited, owing to its high cost and the increased use of metal implants for patients. This study is aimed towards patients who are contraindicated owing to claustrophobia and cardiac pacemakers, and many scenarios in which only computed tomography (CT) images are available, such as emergencies, situations lacking an MR scanner, and situations in which the cost of obtaining an MR scan is prohibitive. From medical practice, our approach can be adopted as a screening method by radiologists to observe abnormal anatomical lesions in certain diseases that are difficult to diagnose by CT. The proposed approach can estimate an MR image based on a CT image using paired and unpaired training data. In contrast to existing synthetic methods for medical imaging, which depend on sparse pairwise-aligned data or plentiful unpaired data, the proposed approach alleviates the rigid registration of paired training, and overcomes the context-misalignment problem of unpaired training. A generative adversarial network was trained to transform two-dimensional (2D) brain CT image slices into 2D brain MR image slices, combining the adversarial, dual cycle-consistent, and voxel-wise losses. Qualitative and quantitative comparisons against independent paired and unpaired training methods demonstrated the superiority of our approach.
The ability to controllably manipulate magnetic skyrmions, small magnetic whirls with particle-like properties, in nanostructured elements is a prerequisite for incorporating them into spintronic devices. Here, we use state-of-the-art electron holographic imaging to directly visualize the morphology and nucleation of magnetic skyrmions in a wedge-shaped FeGe nanostripe that has a width in the range of 45–150 nm. We find that geometrically-confined skyrmions are able to adopt a wide range of sizes and ellipticities in a nanostripe that are absent in both thin films and bulk materials and can be created from a helical magnetic state with a distorted edge twist in a simple and efficient manner. We perform a theoretical analysis based on a three-dimensional general model of isotropic chiral magnets to confirm our experimental results. The flexibility and ease of formation of geometrically confined magnetic skyrmions may help to optimize the design of skyrmion-based memory devices.
Magnetic skyrmions are topologically stable whirlpool-like spin textures that offer great promise as information carriers for future spintronic devices. To enable such applications, particular attention has been focused on the properties of skyrmions in highly confined geometries such as one-dimensional nanowires. Hitherto, it is still experimentally unclear what happens when the width of the nanowire is comparable to that of a single skyrmion. Here, we achieve this by measuring the magnetoresistance in ultra-narrow MnSi nanowires. We observe quantized jumps in magnetoresistance versus magnetic field curves. By tracking the size dependence of the jump number, we infer that skyrmions are assembled into cluster states with a tunable number of skyrmions, in agreement with the Monte Carlo simulations. Our results enable an electric reading of the number of skyrmions in the cluster states, thus laying a solid foundation to realize skyrmion-based memory devices.
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