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research article

Melting of a skyrmion lattice to a skyrmion liquid via a hexatic phase

Huang, Ping  
•
Schonenberger, Thomas  
•
Cantoni, Marco  
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June 15, 2020
Nature Nanotechnology

While in 3D materials melting is a single, first-order phase transition, in 2D systems, it can also proceed via an intermediate phase. For a skyrmion lattice in Cu2OSeO3, magnetic field variations can tune this quasiparticle 2D solid into a skyrmion liquid via an intermediate hexatic phase with short-range translational and quasi-long-range orientational order. The phase transition most commonly observed is probably melting, a transition from ordered crystalline solids to disordered isotropic liquids. In three dimensions, melting is a single, first-order phase transition. In two-dimensional systems, however, theory predicts a general scenario of two continuous phase transitions separated by an intermediate, oriented liquid state, the so-called hexatic phase with short-range translational and quasi-long-range orientational orders. Such hexatic phases occur in colloidal systems, Wigner solids and liquid crystals, all composed of real-matter particles. In contrast, skyrmions are countable soliton configurations with non-trivial topology and these quasi-particles can form two-dimensional lattices. Here we show, by direct imaging with cryo-Lorentz transmission electron microscopy, that magnetic field variations can tune the phase of the skyrmion ensembles in Cu(2)OSeO(3)from a two-dimensional solid through the long-speculated skyrmion hexatic phase to a liquid. The local spin order persists throughout the process. Remarkably, our quantitative analysis demonstrates that the aforementioned topological-defect-induced crystal melting scenario well describes the observed phase transitions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41565-020-0716-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:000540406400002

ArXiv ID

1807.08352

Author(s)
Huang, Ping  
Schonenberger, Thomas  
Cantoni, Marco  
Heinen, Lukas
Magrez, Arnaud  
Rosch, Achim
Carbone, Fabrizio  
Ronnow, Henrik M.  
Date Issued

2020-06-15

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Published in
Nature Nanotechnology
Volume

15

Start page

761

End page

767

Subjects

Nanoscience & Nanotechnology

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

Materials Science

•

order

•

disorder

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

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LUMES  
CIME  
Available on Infoscience
June 30, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/169699
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