1 research outputs found
Element-Specific Study of Magnetic Anisotropy and Hardening in SmCoCu Thin Films
This work investigates the effect of copper substitution on the magnetic
properties of SmCo thin films synthesized by molecular beam epitaxy. A
series of thin films with varying concentrations of Cu were grown under
otherwise identical conditions to disentangle structural and compositional
effects on the magnetic behavior. The combined experimental and theoretical
studies show that Cu substitution at the Co sites not only stabilizes
the formation of the SmCo structure but enhances magnetic anisotropy and
coercivity. Density functional theory calculations indicate that
Sm(CoCu) possesses a higher single-ion anisotropy as compared to
pure SmCo. In addition, X-ray magnetic circular dichroism reveals that Cu
substitution causes an increasing decoupling of the Sm 4\textit{f} and Co
3\textit{d} moments. Scanning transmission electron microscopy confirms
predominantly SmCo phase formation and reveals nanoscale inhomogeneities
in the Cu and Co distribution. Our study based on thin film model systems and
advanced characterization as well as modeling reveals novel aspects of the
complex interplay of intrinsic and extrinsic contributions to magnetic
hysteresis in rare earth-based magnets, \textit{i.e.} the combination of
increased intrinsic anisotropy due to Cu substitution and the extrinsic effect
of inhomogeneous elemental distribution of Cu and Co