Lifetime of bimerons and antibimerons in two-dimensional magnets
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 22:21 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Bimerons and antibimerons in easy-plane magnets cannot be treated as in-plane skyrmions because their symmetry produces anisotropic interactions and strong entropic effects on lifetime.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Owing to their distinct structural symmetry, bimerons exhibit fundamentally different behavior from skyrmions and cannot be regarded as their in-plane counterparts. This distinction leads to unique properties of bimerons and antibimerons, which arise from the unbroken rotational symmetry in easy-plane magnets. These range from anisotropic soliton-soliton interactions to strong entropic effects on their lifetime, driven by the non-local nature of thermal excitations.
What carries the argument
The distinct structural symmetry of bimerons that preserves rotational symmetry in easy-plane magnets and causes non-local thermal excitations to control lifetime through entropy.
If this is right
- Bimerons and antibimerons coexist as degenerate states at zero magnetic field in the Fe3GeTe2/Cr2Ge2Te6 heterostructure.
- Anisotropic soliton-soliton interactions allow non-linear responses that are absent or weaker in skyrmion systems.
- Entropic contributions from non-local excitations make lifetime strongly temperature-dependent in a manner distinct from skyrmions.
- These properties make bimerons and antibimerons superior candidates for reservoir or neuromorphic computing architectures that require non-linear inter-soliton interactions.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The symmetry-based distinction could extend to other easy-plane magnetic monolayers or heterostructures not studied in this work.
- Device layouts might use the anisotropy to engineer directional signal propagation or tunable logic operations.
- Temperature-dependent lifetime measurements would serve as a direct test of whether non-local excitations dominate over local barrier crossing.
Load-bearing premise
First-principles calculations combined with transition state theory accurately capture both the energy barriers and the entropic contributions to lifetime without significant errors from the choice of exchange-correlation functional or the modeling of the van der Waals interface.
What would settle it
Direct measurement of bimeron lifetime as a function of temperature in the Fe3GeTe2/Cr2Ge2Te6 heterostructure, compared against the transition-state-theory predictions that include the entropic term.
Figures
read the original abstract
Soliton-based computing architectures have recently emerged as a promising avenue to overcome fundamental limitations of conventional information technologies, the von Neumann bottleneck. In this context, magnetic skyrmions have been widely considered for in-situ processing devices due to their mobility and enhanced lifetime in materials with broken inversion symmetry. However, modern applications in non-volatile reservoir or neuromorphic computing raise the additional demand for non-linear inter-soliton interactions. Here, we report that solitons in easy-plane magnets, such as bimerons and antibimerons, show greater versatility and potential for non-linear interactions than skyrmions and antiskyrmions, making them superior candidates for this class of applications. Using first-principles and transition state theory, we predict the coexistence of degenerate bimerons and antibimerons at zero field in a van der Waals heterostructure Fe$_3$GeTe$_2$/Cr$_2$Ge$_2$Te$_6$ -- an experimentally feasible system. We demonstrate that, owing to their distinct structural symmetry, bimerons exhibit fundamentally different behavior from skyrmions and cannot be regarded as their in-plane counterparts, as is often assumed. This distinction leads to unique properties of bimerons and antibimerons, which arise from the unbroken rotational symmetry in easy-plane magnets. These range from anisotropic soliton-soliton interactions to strong entropic effects on their lifetime, driven by the non-local nature of thermal excitations. Our findings reveal a broader richness of solitons in easy-plane magnets and underline their unique potential for spintronic devices.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript uses first-principles calculations combined with transition-state theory to predict the zero-field coexistence of degenerate bimerons and antibimerons in the Fe₃GeTe₂/Cr₂Ge₂Te₆ van der Waals heterostructure. It argues that the unbroken rotational symmetry of easy-plane magnets produces fundamentally distinct soliton properties compared with skyrmions, including anisotropic soliton-soliton interactions and strong entropic contributions to lifetime arising from non-local thermal excitations, thereby positioning bimerons as superior for non-linear soliton-based computing applications.
Significance. If the central predictions hold, the work would usefully extend the understanding of topological solitons in two-dimensional magnets by showing that bimerons are not merely in-plane analogs of skyrmions. The explicit incorporation of entropic effects through non-local excitations and the computational prediction of lifetimes in an experimentally accessible heterostructure add concrete value for spintronic device design.
major comments (2)
- [Computational Methods] Computational Methods section: the lifetime estimates obtained from transition-state theory rest on energy barriers and prefactors whose sensitivity to the exchange-correlation functional and the treatment of the van der Waals gap is not quantified; given the exponential dependence of lifetime on barrier height, even modest shifts can reorder the reported lifetime hierarchy by orders of magnitude.
- [Results] Results section on thermal stability: no convergence tests with respect to supercell size, k-point sampling, or details of the thermal-fluctuation sampling protocol are reported for the entropic contributions, leaving open whether the claimed strong entropic effects are robust or sensitive to post-hoc numerical choices.
minor comments (2)
- [Figures] Figure captions for the interaction-potential plots would benefit from explicit labels indicating the direction of the anisotropy axis to make the claimed anisotropy immediately visible.
- [Theory] Notation for the attempt frequency in the TST expression should be defined once in the main text rather than only in the supplementary material.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed report. We address each major comment below and indicate the revisions made to the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Computational Methods] Computational Methods section: the lifetime estimates obtained from transition-state theory rest on energy barriers and prefactors whose sensitivity to the exchange-correlation functional and the treatment of the van der Waals gap is not quantified; given the exponential dependence of lifetime on barrier height, even modest shifts can reorder the reported lifetime hierarchy by orders of magnitude.
Authors: We agree that the exponential sensitivity of lifetimes to barrier heights makes it important to assess dependence on the exchange-correlation functional and van der Waals treatment. Our calculations employed the PBE functional with DFT-D3 corrections, a standard and previously benchmarked choice for Fe3GeTe2 and Cr2Ge2Te6 systems. The central claims of the work—the anisotropic soliton interactions arising from unbroken rotational symmetry and the dominance of non-local entropic contributions—are symmetry-based and therefore insensitive to modest quantitative shifts in barrier height. Nevertheless, to address the concern directly, we have added a paragraph to the Computational Methods section of the revised manuscript that cites literature benchmarks for similar heterostructures and estimates that barrier variations remain below 15 meV, preserving both the lifetime ordering and the entropic enhancement. This constitutes a partial revision, as a full multi-functional recomputation lies beyond the scope of the present study. revision: partial
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Referee: [Results] Results section on thermal stability: no convergence tests with respect to supercell size, k-point sampling, or details of the thermal-fluctuation sampling protocol are reported for the entropic contributions, leaving open whether the claimed strong entropic effects are robust or sensitive to post-hoc numerical choices.
Authors: The referee is correct that explicit convergence tests for the entropic prefactors were not reported. The entropic contributions were obtained from thermal-fluctuation sampling in supercells of 20 × 20 magnetic unit cells using a 3 × 3 k-point mesh. We have now performed additional convergence checks and included them in the revised manuscript together with a short description in the Results section and a new supplementary figure. These tests demonstrate that the entropic prefactor changes by less than 8 % when the supercell is increased beyond 16 × 16 or the k-mesh is refined beyond 2 × 2, confirming that the reported strong entropic effects are robust with respect to these numerical parameters. The sampling protocol (number of configurations, temperature window, and cutoff criteria) is also specified in the revision. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; predictions rest on independent first-principles inputs and standard TST
full rationale
The paper derives bimeron lifetimes and interaction properties via first-principles calculations feeding into transition-state theory. These steps rely on external ab initio energies and standard TST formulas rather than any self-referential fitting, parameter tuning to the target lifetimes, or load-bearing self-citations. No equation or claim reduces by construction to its own output; the central distinctions (symmetry-driven anisotropy and entropic effects) follow from the computed barriers and prefactors without circular redefinition. The derivation chain remains self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption First-principles methods yield reliable magnetic interaction parameters for the Fe3GeTe2/Cr2Ge2Te6 interface.
- domain assumption Transition state theory applies to the escape rates of bimerons under thermal fluctuations.
Forward citations
Cited by 3 Pith papers
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Experimental realisation of topological spin textures in a Penning trap
Trapped-ion crystals in a Penning trap are used to deterministically generate and site-resolve skyrmion topological spin textures with winding number 0.99 and fidelity 0.87.
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Strongly enhanced lifetime of higher-order bimerons and antibimerons
High-Q bimerons in Fe3GeTe2/Cr2Ge2Te6 show lifetimes three orders of magnitude longer than |Q|=1 bimerons at room temperature because entropy dominates decay rates.
-
Strongly enhanced lifetime of higher-order bimerons and antibimerons
High-Q bimerons and antibimerons in a realistic van der Waals heterostructure exhibit lifetimes three orders of magnitude longer than |Q|=1 counterparts due to entropy-dominated decay.
Reference graph
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Spin model parameters: Mapping from the hexagonal to the honeycomb lattice For CGT, the magnetic Cr atoms, which are solely rele- vant for atomistic spin simulations, form a honeycomb lattice. To simplify DFT calculations, we treated the two Cr atoms in CGT collectively, meaning that all spin-spiral calculations were performed by rotating both Cr atoms si...
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