In order to combine silicon technology with the functionality of magnetic
systems, a number of ferromagnetic (FM) materials have been suggested for the
fabrication of metal/semiconductor heterojunctions. In this work, we present a
systematic study of several candidate materials in contact with the Si surface.
We employ density-functional theory calculations to address the thermodynamic
stability and magnetism of both pseudomorphic CsCl-like MSi (M=Mn, Fe, Co,
Ni) thin films and Heusler alloy M2MnSi (M=Fe, Co, Ni) films on Si(001).
Our calculations show that Si-termination of the MSi films is energetically
preferable during epitaxy since it minimizes the energetic cost of broken bonds
at the surface. Moreover, we can explain the calculated trends in thermodynamic
stability of the MSi thin films in terms of the M-Si bond-strength and the
M 3d orbital occupation. From our calculations, we predict that ultrathin
MnSi films are FM with sizable spin magnetic moments at the Mn atoms, while
FeSi and NiSi films are nonmagnetic. However, CoSi films display itinerant
ferromagnetism. For the M2MnSi films with Heusler-type structure, the MnSi
termination is found to have the highest thermodynamic stability. In the FM
ground state, the calculated strength of the effective coupling between the
magnetic moments of Mn atoms within the same layer approximately scales with
the measured Curie temperatures of the bulk M2MnSi compounds. In particular,
the Co2MnSi/Si(001) thin film has a robust FM ground state as in the bulk,
and is found to be stable against a phase separation into CoSi/Si(001) and
MnSi/Si(001) films. Hence this material is of possible use in FM-Si
heterojunctions and deserves further experimental investigations.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure