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Data storage relies on the handling of two states, called bits. The market of mass storage is currently still dominated by magnetic technology, hard disk drives for the broad public and tapes for massive archiving. In these devices each bit is stored in the form of the direction of magnetization of nanosized magnetic domains, i.e. areas of ferromagnetic materials displaying a uniform magnetization. While miniaturization is the conventional way to fuel the continuous increase of device density, disruptive solutions are also sought. To these pertain in recent years many fundamental studies no longer considering the magnetic domains themselves, but the manipulation of the domain walls (DWs) that separate such domains. Concepts of storage and logic based on the propagation of DWs along lithographically-patterned stripes have been patented, while many fundamental aspects of DW propagation deeply related to condensed matter physics are still hotly debated. If one now considers magnetic dots of submicrometer dimensions, the magnetization has a tendency to curl along the outer edges of the nanostructure to close its magnetic flux and thereby reduce its magnetostatic energy. Then both domains and DWs of well-defined geometries arise, whose combined manipulation has been proposed as a multilevel magnetic storage scheme...
The chirality-dependent magnetoelectric properties of Neel-type domain walls in iron garnet films is observed. The electrically driven magnetic domain wall motion changes the direction to the opposite with the reversal of electric polarity of the pro
While magnetic hysteresis usually considers magnetic domains, the switching of the core of magnetic vortices has recently become an active topic. We considered Bloch domain walls, which are known to display at the surface of thin films flux-closure f
We investigated with XMCD-PEEM magnetic imaging the magnetization reversal processes of Neel caps inside Bloch walls in self-assembled, micron-sized Fe(110) dots with flux-closure magnetic state. In most cases the magnetic-dependent processes are sym
Non-collinear spin textures in ferromagnetic ultrathin films are attracting a renewed interest fueled by possible fine engineering of several magnetic interactions, notably the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. This allows the stabilizat
We resolve the domain-wall structure of the model antiferromagnet $text{Cr}_2text{O}_3$ using nanoscale scanning diamond magnetometry and second-harmonic-generation microscopy. We find that the 180$^circ$ domain walls are predominantly Bloch-like, an