60 research outputs found
Electronic and magnetic properties of the TiO Magn\'eli phase
Structural, electronic and magnetic properties of TiO have been
studied by \textit{ab initio} methods in low-, intermediate- and
high-temperature phases. We have found the charge and orbital order in all
three phases to be non-stable, and the formation of Ti-Ti
bipolaronic states less likely as compared to TiO. Several
quasidegenerate magnetic configurations were calculated to have different width
of the band gap, suggesting that the reordering of the unpaired spins at
Ti ions might at least partially be responsible for the changes in
conductivity of this material.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Thermal collapse of spin-polarization in half-metallic ferromagnets
The temperature dependence of the magnetization and spin-polarization at the
Fermi level is investigated for half-metallic ferromagnets. We reveal a new
mechanism, where the hybridization of states forming the half-metallic gap
depends on thermal spin fluctuations and the polarization can drop abruptly at
temperatures much lower than the Curie point. We verify this for NiMnSb by
ab-initio calculations. The thermal properties are studied by mapping ab-initio
results to an extended Heisenberg model which includes longitudinal
fluctuations and is solved by a Monte Carlo method
Half-metallic ferromagnets for magnetic tunnel junctions
Using theoretical arguments, we show that, in order to exploit half-metallic
ferromagnets in tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) junctions, it is crucial to
eliminate interface states at the Fermi level within the half-metallic gap;
contrary to this, no such problem arises in giant magnetoresistance elements.
Moreover, based on an a priori understanding of the electronic structure, we
propose an antiferromagnetically coupled TMR element, in which interface states
are eliminated, as a paradigm of materials design from first principles. Our
conclusions are supported by ab-initio calculations
Interface Engineering to Create a Strong Spin Filter Contact to Silicon
Integrating epitaxial and ferromagnetic Europium Oxide (EuO) directly on
silicon is a perfect route to enrich silicon nanotechnology with spin filter
functionality.
To date, the inherent chemical reactivity between EuO and Si has prevented a
heteroepitaxial integration without significant contaminations of the interface
with Eu silicides and Si oxides.
We present a solution to this long-standing problem by applying two
complementary passivation techniques for the reactive EuO/Si interface:
() an hydrogen-Si passivation and () the
application of oxygen-protective Eu monolayers --- without using any additional
buffer layers.
By careful chemical depth profiling of the oxide-semiconductor interface via
hard x-ray photoemission spectroscopy, we show how to systematically minimize
both Eu silicide and Si oxide formation to the sub-monolayer regime --- and how
to ultimately interface-engineer chemically clean, heteroepitaxial and
ferromagnetic EuO/Si in order to create a strong spin filter contact to
silicon.Comment: 11 pages of scientific paper, 10 high-resolution color figures.
Supplemental information on the thermodynamic problem available (PDF).
High-resolution abstract graphic available (PNG). Original research (2016
Tuning the Curie temperature of FeCo compounds by tetragonal distortion
Combining density-functional theory calculations with a classical Monte Carlo
method, we show that for B2-type FeCo compounds tetragonal distortion gives
rise to a strong reduction of the Curie temperature . The
monotonically decreases from 1575 K (for ) to 940 K
(for c/a=\sqrtwo). We find that the nearest neighbor Fe-Co exchange
interaction is sufficient to explain the behavior of the
. Combination of high magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy with
a moderate value suggests tetragonal FeCo grown on the Rh
substrate with to be a promising material for heat-assisted magnetic
recording applications.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Crystal Hall and crystal magneto-optical effect in thin films of SrRuO
Motivated by the recently observed topological Hall effect in ultra-thin
films of SrRuO (SRO) grown on SrTiO (STO) [001] substrate, we
investigate the magnetic ground state and anomalous Hall response of the SRO
ultra-thin films by virtue of spin density functional theory (DFT). Our
findings reveal that in the monolayer limit of an SRO film, a large energy
splitting of Ru- states stabilizes an anti-ferromagnetic (AFM)
insulating magnetic ground state. For the AFM ground state, our Berry curvature
calculations predict a large anomalous Hall response upon doping. From the
systematic symmetry analysis, we uncover that the large anomalous Hall effect
arises due to a combination of broken time-reversal and crystal symmetries
caused by the arrangement of non-magnetic atoms (Sr and O) in the SRO
monolayer. We identify the emergent Hall effect as a clear manifestation of the
so-called crystal Hall effect in terminology of \v{S}mejkal et al.
arXiv:1901.00445 (2019), and demonstrate that it persists at finite frequencies
which is the manifestation of the crystal magneto-optical effect. Moreover, we
find a colossal dependence of the AHE on the degree of crystal symmetry
breaking also in ferromagnetic SRO films, which all together points to an
alternative explanation of the emergence of the topological Hall effect
observed in this type of systems.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Half-metallic ferromagnetism induced by dynamic electron correlations in VAs
The electronic structure of the VAs compound in the zinc-blende structure is
investigated using a combined density-functional and dynamical mean-field
theory approach. Contrary to predictions of a ferromagnetic semiconducting
ground state obtained by density-functional calculations, dynamical
correlations induce a closing of the gap and produce a half-metallic
ferromagnetic state. These results emphasize the importance of dynamic
correlations in materials suitable for spintronics.Comment: Published in Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 197203 (2006
Introduction to half-metallic Heusler alloys: Electronic Structure and Magnetic Properties
Intermetallic Heusler alloys are amongst the most attractive half-metallic
systems due to the high Curie temperatures and the structural similarity to the
binary semiconductors. In this review we present an overview of the basic
electronic and magnetic properties of both Heusler families: the so-called
half-Heusler alloys like NiMnSb and the the full-Heusler alloys like
CoMnGe. \textit{Ab-initio} results suggest that both the electronic and
magnetic properties in these compounds are intrinsically related to the
appearance of the minority-spin gap. The total spin magnetic moment
scales linearly with the number of the valence electrons , such that
for the full-Heusler and for the half-Heusler alloys,
thus opening the way to engineer new half-metallic alloys with the desired
magnetic properties.Comment: 28 pages, submitted for a special issue of 'Journal of Physics D:
Applied Physics' on Heusler alloy
Structural and magnetic properties of the (001) and (111) surfaces of the half-metal NiMnSb
Using the full potential linearised augmented planewave method we study the
electronic and magnetic properties of the (001) and (111) surfaces of the
half-metallic Heusler alloy NiMnSb from first-principles. We take into account
all possible surface terminations including relaxations of these surfaces.
Special attention is paid to the spin-polarization at the Fermi level which
governs the spin-injection from such a metal into a semiconductor. In general,
these surfaces lose the half-metallic character of the bulk NiMnSb, but for the
(111) surfaces this loss is more pronounced. Although structural optimization
does not change these features qualitatively, specifically for the (111)
surfaces relaxations can compensate much of the spin-polarization at the Fermi
surface that has been lost upon formation of the surface.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figure
THERMODYNAMICS OF MICELLIZATION OF HEXADECYLTRIMETHYLAMMONIUM BROMIDE IN PROPYLENE GLYCOL-WATER MIXTURE: A CONDUCTIVITY STUDY
Micellization of hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (syn. cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, CTAB) in propylene glycol-water (30% v/v) binary mixture, as well as the thermodynamic properties of the resulting micelles, were investigated by electrical conductivity measurements. The conductivity data were used to determine both the critical micellar concentration (CMC) and the micellar ionization degree (a) of CTAB in the temperature range 298.2-310.2 K. The equilibrium model of micelle formation was applied in order to obtain the thermodynamic parameters (the standard molar Gibbs free energy, DGm0, enthalpy, DHm0 and entropy, DSm0) of the micellization process. The values of DGm0 and DHm0 were found to be negative at all investigated temperatures, while the values of DSm0 were positive and became more positive as temperature increased. A linear dependence between DSm0 and DHm0, i.e. an enthalpy-entropy compensation effect, was observed. TERMODINAMIKA MICELIZACIJE HEKSADECILTRIMETILAMONIJUM-BROMIDA U SMEŠI PROPILEN-GLIKOL-VODA: KONDUKTOMETRIJSKO ISPITIVANJE Konduktometrijski je ispitivana micelizacija heksadeciltrimetilamonijum-bromida (sinonim cetiltrimetilamonijum-bromid, CTAB) u binarnoj smeši propilen-glikol-voda (30%, v/v), kao i termodinamičke osobine nastalih micela. Merenjem specifične provodljivosti određeni su kritična micelarna koncentracija (KMK) i stepen jonizacije micele (a) CTAB u opsegu temperatura 298,2-310,2 K određeni su. Primenom ravnotežnog modela za proces micelizacije izračunati su termodinamički parametri: promena standardne molarne Džibsove slobodne energije, (DGm0), entalpije (DHm0) i entropije (DSm0) micelizacije. Vrednosti DGm0 i DHm0 su bile negativne na svakoj od ispitivanih temperatura, dok su vrednosti DSm0 bile pozitivne i povećavale su se sa porastom temperature. Na osnovu linearne zavisnosti između DHm0 i DSm0 utvrđen je tzv. entalpijsko-entropijski kompenzacioni efekat
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