22 research outputs found
Correlation in the transition metal based Heusler compounds CoMnSi and CoFeSi
Half-metallic ferromagnets like the full Heusler compounds with formula
XYZ are supposed to show an integer value of the spin magnetic moment.
Calculations reveal in certain cases of X = Co based compounds non-integer
values, in contrast to experiments. In order to explain deviations of the
magnetic moment calculated for such compounds, the dependency of the electronic
structure on the lattice parameter was studied theoretically. In local density
approximation (LDA), the minimum total energy of CoFeSi is found for the
experimental lattice parameter, but the calculated magnetic moment is about 12%
too low. Half-metallic ferromagnetism and a magnetic moment equal to the
experimental value of are found, however, only after increasing the
lattice parameter by more than 6%.
To overcome this discrepancy, the LDA scheme was used to respect on-site
electron correlation in the calculations. Those calculations revealed for
CoFeSi that an effective Coulomb-exchange interaction in the
range of about 2eV to 5eV leads to half-metallic ferromagnetism and the
measured, integer magnetic moment at the measured lattice parameter. Finally,
it is shown in the case of CoMnSi that correlation may also serve to
destroy the half-metallic behavior if it becomes too strong (for CoMnSi
above 2eV and for CoFeSi above 5eV). These findings indicate that on-site
correlation may play an important role in the description of Heusler compounds
with localized moments.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Origin and Properties of the Gap in the Half-Ferromagnetic Heusler Alloys
We study the origin of the gap and the role of chemical composition in the
half-ferromagnetic Heusler alloys using the full-potential screened KKR method.
In the paramagnetic phase the C1_b compounds, like NiMnSb, present a gap.
Systems with 18 valence electrons, Z_t, per unit cell, like CoTiSb, are
semiconductors, but when Z_t > 18 antibonding states are also populated, thus
the paramagnetic phase becomes unstable and the half-ferromagnetic one is
stabilized. The minority occupied bands accommodate a total of nine electrons
and the total magnetic moment per unit cell in mu_B is just the difference
between Z_t and . While the substitution of the transition metal
atoms may preserve the half-ferromagnetic character, substituting the atom
results in a practically rigid shift of the bands and the loss of
half-metallicity. Finally we show that expanding or contracting the lattice
parameter by 2% preserves the minority-spin gap.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures New figures, revised tex
Role of defects and disorder in the half-metallic full-Heusler compounds
Half-metallic ferromagnets and especially the full-Heusler alloys containing
Co are at the center of scientific research due to their potential applications
in spintronics. For realistic devices it is important to control accurately the
creation of defects in these alloys. We review some of our late results on the
role of defects and impurities in these compounds. More precisely we present
results for the following cases (i) doping and disorder in CoCr(Mn)Al(Si)
alloys, (ii) half-metallic ferrimagnetism appeared due to the creation of
Cr(Mn) antisites in these alloys, (iii) Co-doping in MnVAl(Si) alloys
leading to half-metallic antiferromagnetism, and finally (iv) the occurrence of
vacancies in the full-Heusler alloys containing Co and Mn. These results are
susceptible of encouraging further theoretical and experimental research in the
properties of these compounds.Comment: Chapter intended for a book with contributions of the invited
speakers of the International Conference on Nanoscale Magnetism 2007. Revised
version contains new figure
Room-temperature spin-orbit torque in NiMnSb
Materials that crystallize in diamond-related lattices, with Si and GaAs as their prime examples, are at the foundation of modern electronics. Simultaneously, inversion asymmetries in their crystal structure and relativistic spin–orbit coupling led to discoveries of non-equilibrium spin-polarization phenomena that are now extensively explored as an electrical means for manipulating magnetic moments in a variety of spintronic structures. Current research of these relativistic spin–orbit torques focuses primarily on magnetic transition-metal multilayers. The low-temperature diluted magnetic semiconductor (Ga, Mn)As, in which spin–orbit torques were initially discovered, has so far remained the only example showing the phenomenon among bulk non-centrosymmetric ferromagnets. Here we present a general framework, based on the complete set of crystallographic point groups, for identifying the potential presence and symmetry of spin–orbit torques in non-centrosymmetric crystals. Among the candidate room-temperature ferromagnets we chose to use NiMnSb, which is a member of the broad family of magnetic Heusler compounds. By performing all-electrical ferromagnetic resonance measurements in single-crystal epilayers of NiMnSb we detect room-temperature spin–orbit torques generated by effective fields of the expected symmetry and of a magnitude consistent with our ab initio calculations.University of WürzburgThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Publishing Group via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nphys377