88 research outputs found
Structural and electronic properties of epitaxial multilayer h-BN on Ni(111) for spintronics applications
Hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) is a promising material for implementation in spintronics due to a large band gap, low spin-orbit coupling, and a small lattice mismatch to graphene and to close-packed surfaces of fcc-Ni(111) and hcp-Co(0001). Epitaxial deposition of h-BN on ferromagnetic metals is aimed at small interface scattering of charge and spin carriers. We report on the controlled growth of h-BN/Ni(111) by means of molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). Structural and electronic properties of this system are investigated using cross-section transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electron spectroscopies which confirm good agreement with the properties of bulk h-BN. The latter are also corroborated by density functional theory (DFT) calculations, revealing that the first h-BN layer at the interface to Ni is metallic. Our investigations demonstrate that MBE is a promising, versatile alternative to both the exfoliation approach and chemical vapour deposition of h-BN
Anomalous and topological Hall effects in epitaxial thin films of the noncollinear antiferromagnet Mn3Sn
Noncollinear antiferromagnets with a D0(19) (space group = 194, P6(3)/mmc) hexagonal structure have garnered much attention for their potential applications in topological spintronics. Here, we report the deposition of continuous epitaxial thin films of such a material, Mn3Sn, and characterize their crystal structure using a combination of x-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy. Growth of Mn3Sn films with both (0001) c-axis orientation and (40 (4) over bar3) texture is achieved. In the latter case, the thin films exhibit a small uncompensated Mn moment in the basal plane, quantified via magnetometry and x-ray magnetic circular dichroism experiments. This cannot account for the large anomalous Hall effect simultaneously observed in these films, even at room temperature, with magnitude sigma(xy)(mu H-0 = 0 T) = 21 Omega(-1) cm(-1) and coercive field mu H-0(c) = 1.3 T. We attribute the origin of this anomalous Hall effect to momentum-space Berry curvature arising from the symmetry-breaking inverse triangular spin structure of Mn3Sn. Upon cooling through the transition to a glassy ferromagnetic state at around 50 K, a peak in the Hall resistivity close to the coercive field emerges. This indicates the onset of a topological Hall effect contribution, arising from a nonzero scalar spin chirality that generates a real-space Berry phase. We demonstrate that the polarity of this topological Hall effect, and hence the chiral nature of the noncoplanar magnetic structure driving it, can be controlled using different field-cooling conditions
Dirac cone protected by non symmorphic symmetry and three dimensional Dirac line node in ZrSiS
Materials harbouring exotic quasiparticles, such as massless Dirac and Weyl fermions, have garnered much attention from physics and material science communities due to their exceptional physical properties such as ultra high mobility and extremely large magnetoresistances. Here, we show that the highly stable, non toxic and earth abundant material, ZrSiS, has an electronic band structure that hosts several Dirac cones that form a Fermi surface with a diamond shaped line of Dirac nodes. We also show that the square Si lattice in ZrSiS is an excellent template for realizing new types of two dimensional Dirac cones recently predicted by Young and Kane. Finally, we find that the energy range of the linearly dispersed bands is as high as 2 amp; 8201;eV above and below the Fermi level; much larger than of other known Dirac materials. This makes ZrSiS a very promising candidate to study Dirac electrons, as well as the properties of lines of Dirac node
Interlayer Exchange Coupling Mediated by Valence Band Electrons
The interlayer exchange coupling mediated by valence band electrons in
all-semiconductor IV-VI magnetic/nonmagnetic superlattices is studied
theoretically. A 3D tight-binding model, accounting for the band and magnetic
structure of the constituent superlattice components is used to calculate the
spin-dependent part of the total electronic energy. The antiferromagnetic
coupling between ferromagnetic layers in EuS/PbS superlattices is obtained, in
agreement with the experimental evidences. The results obtained for the
coupling between antiferromagnetic layers in EuTe/PbTe superlattices are also
presented.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, to be submitted to Phys.Rev.
Spin Motion in Electron Transmission through Ultrathin Ferromagnetic Films Accessed by Photoelectron Spectroscopy
Ab initio and model calculations demonstrate that the spin motion of
electrons transmitted through ferromagnetic films can be analyzed in detail by
means of angle- and spin-resolved core-level photoelectron spectroscopy. The
spin motion appears as precession of the photoelectron spin polarization around
and as relaxation towards the magnetization direction. In a systematic study
for ultrathin Fe films on Pd(001) we elucidate its dependence on the Fe film
thickness and on the Fe electronic structure. In addition to elastic and
inelastic scattering, the effect of band gaps on the spin motion is addressed
in particular.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
The Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interaction across a tunneling junction out of equilibrium
The Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interaction between two magnetic
- spin impurities across a tunneling junction is studied when the system
is driven out of equilibrium through biasing the junction. The nonequilibrium
situation is handled with the Keldysh time-loop perturbation formalism in
conjunction with appropriate coupling methods for tunneling systems due to
Caroli and Feuchtwang. We find that the presence of a nonequilibrium bias
across the junction leads to an interference of several fundamental
oscillations, such that in this tunneling geometry, it is possible to tune the
interaction between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic coupling at a fixed
impurity configuration, simply by changing the bias across the junction.
Furthermore, it is shown that the range of the RKKY interaction is altered out
of equilibrium, such that in particular the interaction energy between two
slabs of spins scales extensively with the thickness of the slabs in the
presence of an applied bias.Comment: 38 pages revtex preprint; 5 postscript figures; submitted to Phys.
Rev.
'Theory for the enhanced induced magnetization in coupled magnetic trilayers in the presence of spin fluctuations'
Motivated by recent experiments, the effect of the interlayer exchange
interaction on the magnetic properties of coupled Co/Cu/Ni
trilayers is studied theoretically. Here the Ni film has a lower Curie
temperature than the Co film in case of decoupled layers. We
show that by taking into account magnetic fluctuations the interlayer coupling
induces a strong magnetization for T\gtsim T_{C,\rm Ni} in the Ni film. For
an increasing the resonance-like peak of the longitudinal Ni
susceptibility is shifted to larger temperatures, whereas its maximum value
decreases strongly. A decreasing Ni film thickness enhances the induced Ni
magnetization for T\gtsim T_{C,\rm Ni}. The measurements cannot be explained
properly by a mean field estimate, which yields a ten times smaller effect.
Thus, the observed magnetic properties indicate the strong effect of 2D
magnetic fluctuations in these layered magnetic systems. The calculations are
performed with the help of a Heisenberg Hamiltonian and a Green's function
approach.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Twisted exchange interaction between localized spins embedded in a one- or two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling
We study theoretically the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interaction
in one- and two-dimensions in presence of a Rashba spin-orbit (SO) coupling. We
show that rotation of the spin of conduction electrons due to SO coupling
causes a twisted RKKY interaction between localized spins which consists of
three different terms: Heisenberg, Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya, and Ising
interactions. We also show that the effective spin Hamiltonian reduces to the
usual RKKY interaction Hamiltonian in the twisted spin space where the spin
quantization axis of one localized spin is rotated.Comment: 4pages, no figur
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