41 research outputs found
First-principles prediction of high Curie temperature for ferromagnetic bcc-Co and bcc-FeCo alloys and its relevance to tunneling magnetoresistance
We determine from first-principles the Curie temperature Tc for bulk Co in
the hcp, fcc, bcc, and tetragonalized bct phases, for FeCo alloys, and for bcc
and bct Fe. For bcc-Co, Tc=1420 K is predicted. This would be the highest Curie
temperature among the Co phases, suggesting that bcc-Co/MgO/bcc-Co tunnel
junctions offer high magnetoresistance ratios even at room temperature. The
Curie temperatures are calculated by mapping ab initio results to a Heisenberg
model, which is solved by a Monte Carlo method
Exchange parameters and adiabatic magnon energies from spin-spiral calculations
We present a method of extracting the exchange parameters of the classical
Heisenberg model from first-principles calculations of spin-spiral total
energies based on density functional theory. The exchange parameters of the
transition-metal monoxides MnO and NiO are calculated and used to estimate
magnetic properties such as transition temperatures and magnon energies.
Furthermore we show how to relate the magnon energies directly to differences
in spin-spiral total energies for systems containing an arbitrary number of
magnetic sublattices. This provides a comparison between magnon energies using
a finite number of exchange parameters and the infinite limit
Materials science: Clockwork at the atomic scale
Design rules for exotic materials known as polar metals have been put into practice in thin films. The findings will motivate studies of how a phenomenon called screening can be manipulated to generate new phases in metal