Thermoelectric fingerprinting of Bloch- and Néel-type skyrmions

Abstract

Magnetic skyrmions are nanoscale spin textures that exhibit topological stability, which, along with their thermal and electrical transport properties, make them the ideal candidates for a variety of technological applications. Accessing the skyrmion spin texture at the nanoscale and understanding its interaction with local thermal gradients is essential for engineering skyrmion-based transport phenomena. However, direct experimental insight into the local thermoelectric response of single skyrmions remains limited. To address this, we employ scanning thermoelectric microscopy (SThEM) to probe the nanoscale thermoelectric response from a single skyrmion. By mapping the local thermoelectric voltage with nanoscale precision, we reveal a unique spatially resolved response that is the convolution of the underlying spin texture of the skyrmion and its interaction with the highly localized thermal gradient originating from the heated probe. We combine this with thermoelectric modelling of a range of skyrmion spin textures to reveal unique thermoelectric responses and allow the possibility of SThEM to be used as a tool to distinguish nanoscale spin textures. These findings provide fundamental insights into the interaction of topologically protected spin textures with local thermal gradients and the resultant spin transport. We demonstrate a route to thermally characterize nanoscale spin textures, accelerating the material optimization cycle, while also opening the possibility to harness skyrmions for spin caloritronics. (c) 2025 Author(s). All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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en

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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