127 research outputs found
Magnetic anisotropy and spin-spiral wave in V, Cr and Mn atomic chains on Cu(001) surface: First principles calculations
Recent ab intio studies of the magnetic properties of all 3d transition
metal(TM) freestanding atomic chains predicted that these nanowires could have
a giant magnetic anisotropy energy (MAE) and might support a spin-spiral
structure, thereby suggesting that these nanowires would have technological
applicationsin, e.g., high density magnetic data storages. In order to
investigate how the substrates may affect the magnetic properties of the
nanowires, here we systematically study the V, Cr and Mn linear atomic chains
on the Cu(001) surface based on the density functional theory with the
generalized gradient approximation. We find that V, Cr, and Mn linear chains on
the Cu(001) surface still have a stable or metastable ferromagnetic state.
However, the ferromagnetic state is unstable against formation of a
noncollinear spin-spiral structure in the Mn linear chains and also the V
linear chain on the atop sites on the Cu(001) surface, due to the frustrated
magnetic interactions in these systems. Nonetheless, the presence of the
Cu(001) substrate does destabilize the spin-spiral state already present in the
freestanding V linear chain and stabilizes the ferromagnetic state in the V
linear chain on the hollow sites on Cu(001). When spin-orbit coupling (SOC) is
included, the spin magnetic moments remain almost unchanged, due to the
weakness of SOC in 3d TM chains. Furthermore, both the orbital magnetic moments
and MAEs for the V, Cr and Mn are small, in comparison with both the
corresponding freestanding nanowires and also the Fe, Co and Ni linear chains
on the Cu (001) surface.Comment: Accepted for publication in J. Phys. D: Applied Physic
Above-room-temperature ferromagnetism in half-metallic Heusler compounds NiCrP, NiCrSe, NiCrTe and NiVAs: A first-principles study
We study the interatomic exchange interactions and Curie temperatures in
half-metallic semi Heusler compounds NiCrZ (Z=P, Se, Te) and NiVAs. The study
is performed within the framework of density functional theory. The calculation
of exchange parameters is based on the frozen-magnon approach. It is shown that
the exchange interactions in NiCrZ vary strongly depending on the Z
constituent. The Curie temperature, Tc, is calculated within the mean field and
random phase approximations. The difference between two estimations is related
to the properties of the exchange interactions. The predicted Curie
temperatures of all four systems are considerably higher than room temperature.
The relation between the half-metallicity and the value of the Curie
temperature is discussed. The combination of a high spin-polarization of charge
carriers and a high Curie temperature makes these Heusler alloys interesting
candidates for spintronics applications.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic Exchange Couplings from Noncollinear Spin Density Functional Perturbation Theory
We propose a method for the evaluation of magnetic exchange couplings based
on noncollinear spin-density functional calculations. The method employs the
second derivative of the total Kohn-Sham energy of a single reference state, in
contrast to approximations based on Kohn-Sham total energy differences. The
advantage of our approach is twofold: It provides a physically motivated
picture of the transition from a low-spin to a high-spin state, and it utilizes
a perturbation scheme for the evaluation of magnetic exchange couplings. The
latter simplifies the way these parameters are predicted using
first-principles: It avoids the non-trivial search for different spin-states
that needs to be carried out in energy difference methods and it opens the
possibility of "black-boxifying" the extraction of exchange couplings from
density functional theory calculations. We present proof of concept
calculations of magnetic exchange couplings in the H--He--H model system and in
an oxovanadium bimetallic complex where the results can be intuitively
rationalized.Comment: J.Chem. Phys. (accepted
Stability of ferromagnetism in the half-metallic pnictides and similar compounds: A first-principles study
Based on first-principles electron structure calculations and employing the
frozen-magnon approximation we study the exchange interactions in a series of
transition-metal binary alloys crystallizing in the zinc-blende structure and
calculate the Curie temperature within both the mean-field approximation (MFA)
and random-phase approximation (RPA). We study two Cr compounds, CrAs and CrSe,
and four Mn compounds: MnSi, MnGe, MnAs and MnC. MnC, MnSi and MnGe are
isovalent to CrAs and MnAs is isoelectronic with CrSe. Ferromagnetism is
particular stable for CrAs, MnSi and MnGe: All three compounds show Curie
temperatures around 1000 K. On the other hand, CrSe and MnAs show a tendency to
antiferromagnetism when compressing the lattice. In MnC the half-metallic gap
is located in the majority-spin channel contrary to the other five compounds.
The large half-metallic gaps, very high Curie temperatures, the stability of
the ferromagnetism with respect to the variation of the lattice parameter and a
coherent growth on semiconductors make MnSi and CrAs most promising candidates
for the use in spintronics devises.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
First-principles calculation of the intersublattice exchange interactions and Curie temperatures of full Heusler alloys Ni2MnX (X=Ga, In, Sn, Sb)
The interatomic exchange interactions and Curie temperatures in Ni-based full
Heusler alloys Ni2MnX with X=Ga, In, Sn and Sb are studied within the framework
of the density-functional theory. The calculation of the exchange parameters is
based on the frozen-magnon approach. Despite closeness of the experimental
Curie temperatures for all four systems their magnetism appeared to differ
strongly. This difference involves both the Mn-Mn and Mn-Ni exchange
interactions. The Curie temperatures, Tc, are calculated within the mean-field
approximation by solving a matrix equation for a multi-sublattice system. Good
agreement with experiment for all four systems is obtained. The role of
different exchange interactions in the formation of Tc of the systems is
discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Heisenberg Hamiltonian description of multiple-sublattice itinerant-electron systems: General considerations and applications to NiMnSb and MnAs
We consider magnetic systems where the magnetic sublattices can be unambiguously separated into sublattices of inducing and induced moments. The concrete numerical calculations are performed for half-metallic ferromagnetic Heusler compound NiMnSb and hexagonal phase of MnAs. In both systems, Mn atoms possess a robust atomic moment that is much larger than the induced moments of other atoms. It is shown that the treatment of the induced moments as independent variables of the Heisenberg Hamiltonian leads to artificial features in the spin-wave spectrum. We show that the artificial features of the model do not have a dramatic influence on the estimated value of the Curie temperature. This is demonstrated within both mean-field approximation and random-phase approximation. It is shown that the calculational scheme where the induced moments are assumed to fully adjust their values and directions to the adiabatic magnetic configurations of the inducing moments is free from the artificial feature in the spin-wave spectra. In this scheme, the exchange interaction between the inducing and induced moments appears as renormalization of the exchange interactions between inducing moments. It is shown that the redistribution of the exchange interactions has strong influence on the estimated value of the Curie temperature because of the decreased number of the degrees of freedom in the thermodynamic model. Different schemes of the mapping of the systems on the Heisenberg Hamiltonian are examined. The similarities and differences in the properties of NiMnSb and MnAs are discussed
Magnetic properties of iron pnictides from spin-spiral calculations
The wave-vector (q) and doping dependences of the magnetic energy, iron
moment, and effective exchange interactions in LaFeAsO, BaFe2As2, and SrFe2As2\
are studied by self-consistent LSDA calculations for co-planar spin spirals.
For the undoped compounds, the calculated total energy, E(q), reaches its
minimum at q corresponding to stripe anti-ferromagnetic order. In LaFeAsO, this
minimum becomes flat already at low levels of electron-doping and shifts to an
incommensurate q at delta=0.2, where delta is the number of additional
electrons (delta>0) or holes (delta<0) per Fe. In BaFe2As2 and SrFe2As2, stripe
order remains stable for hole doping down to delta=-0.3. Under electron doping,
on the other hand, the E(q) minimum shifts to incommensurate q already at
delta=0.1.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, International Conference on Magnetism, Karlsruhe,
July 26 - 31, 200
Electronic structure, exchange interactions and Curie temperature in diluted III-V magnetic semiconductors: (GaCr)As, (GaMn)As, (GaFe)As
We complete our earlier (Phys. Rev. B, {\bf 66}, 134435 (2002)) study of the
electronic structure, exchange interactions and Curie temperature in (GaMn)As
and extend the study to two other diluted magnetic semiconductors (GaCr)As and
(GaFe)As. Four concentrations of the 3d impurities are studied: 25%, 12.5%,
6.25%, 3.125%. (GaCr)As and (GaMn)As are found to possess a number of similar
features. Both are semi-metallic and ferromagnetic, with similar properties of
the interatomic exchange interactions and the same scale of the Curie
temperature. In both systems the presence of the charge carriers is crucial for
establishing the ferromagnetic order. An important difference between two
systems is in the character of the dependence on the variation of the number of
carriers. The ferromagnetism in (GaMn)As is found to be very sensitive to the
presence of the donor defects, like As antisites. On the other hand,
the Curie temperature of (GaCr)As depends rather weakly on the presence of this
type of defects but decreases strongly with decreasing number of electrons. We
find the exchange interactions between 3d atoms that make a major contribution
into the ferromagnetism of (GaCr)As and (GaMn)As and propose an exchange path
responsible for these interactions. The properties of (GaFe)As are found to
differ crucially from the properties of (GaCr)As and (GaMn)As. (GaFe)As does
not show a trend to ferromagnetism and is not half-metallic that makes this
system unsuitable for the use in spintronic semiconductor devices
Searching for Si-based spintronics by first principles calculations
Density functional theory (DFT) calculations are used to study the epitaxial growth and the magnetic properties of thin films of MnSi on the Si(001) surface. For adsorption of a single Mn atom, we find that binding at the subsurface site below the Si surface dimers is the most stable adsorption site. There is an energy barrier of only 0.3 eV for adsorbed Mn to go subsurface, and an energy barrier of 1.3 eV for penetration to deeper layers. From the calculated potential-energy surface for the Mn adatom we conclude that the most stable site on the surface corresponds to the hollow site where Mn is placed between two Si surface dimers. Despite Si(001) geometrically being an anisotropic surface, the on-surface diffusion for both directions along and perpendicular to the Si dimer rows has almost the same diffusion barrier of 0.65 eV. For coverage above 1 ML, the lowest energy structure is a pure Mn subsurface layer, capped by a layer of Si adatoms. We conclude that the Mn-silicide films stabilize in an epitaxially CsCl-like (B2) crystal structure. Such MnSi films are found to have sizable magnetic moments at the Mn atoms near the surface and interface, and ferromagnetic coupling of the Mn clarify within the layers. Layer-resolved electronic densities-of-states are presented that show a high degree of spin polarization at the Fermi level, up to 30 and 50% for films with one or two MnSi films, respectively. In order to clarify the stability of ferromagnetism at finite temperatures we estimate the Curie temperature (Tc) of MnSi films using a multiple-sublattice Heisenberg model with first- and second-nearest neighbor interactions determined from DFT calculations for various collinear spin configurations. The Curie temperature is calculated both in the mean-field approximation (MFA) and in the random-phase approximation (RPA). In the latter case, we find a weak logarithmic dependence of Tc on the magnetic anisotropy parameter, which was calculated to be 0.4 meV. Large Curie temperatures of above 200K for a monolayer MnSi film, and above 300K for a 2ML MnSi film are obtained within the RPA, and even higher values in MFA. Complementary calculations are performed for non-collinear spin structures to study the limitations of the mapping of the system onto a Heisenberg model. We demonstrate that biquadratic interatomic exchange interactions and longitudinal fluctuations of atomic moments give important contributions to the energetics of the system
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