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Spintronics A. Kellou and H. Aourag

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III. Applications: iii) Ternary alloys. Stoichiometric composition X2YZ ... iii) Ternary systems. iv) Layered structures. Clean V(001), Cr(001) and Fe (100) surfaces ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Spintronics A. Kellou and H. Aourag


1
SpintronicsA. Kellou and H. Aourag
  • Metallic Thin Films Revisited Fe, Co, Ni
    Multilayers

2
Spintronics
Metallic Thin Films Revisited Fe, Co, Ni
Multilayers
Spintronics To Control a Spin of Electrons, not
a Charge
  • Magnetic Nanostructures for Spintronics
  • Magnetic Multilayers
  • Magnetic Wires
  • Magnetic Quantum Dots
  • Applications of Magnetic Nanostructures
  • Reading Heads, Magnetic Field Sensors, MRAM
  • Field Effect Transistor, Spin-Valve Transistor
  • Quantum Computer

3
Basic Structure
The prototype device that is already in use in
industry as a read head memory-storage cell
is the giant-magnetoresistive (GMR) sandwich
structure which consists of alternating
ferromagnetic and nonmagnetic metal layers.

4
Basic Structure
Depending on the relative orientation of the
magnetizations in the magnetic layers, the
device resistance changes from small (parallel
magnetizations) to large (antiparallel
magnetizations). This change in resistance
(also called magnetoresistance) is used to sense
changes in magnetic fields

5
Basic Structure

6
Basic Structure
  • two different approaches
  • existing GMR-based technology
  • developing new materials with
  • larger spin polarization of electrons
  • making improvements or variations in the
    existing device
  • that allow for better spin filtering.
  • finding novel ways of both generation and
  • utilization of spin-polarized currents.


7
Basic Structure
Problems existing metal-based devices do not
amplify signals (although they are successful
switches or valves), whereas semiconductor
based spintronic devices could in principle
provide amplification and serve, in general, as
multi-functional devices. spin polarizers and
spin valves

8
Magnetic Random Access Memory (MRAM)
Reversible
Low Resistance
High Resistance
9
Issues in Magnetic Multilayers
  • Fabrication of Ordered Nanostructures on a
    Surface
  • A detailed understanding of the various atomic
    processes
  • that occur during the formation of nanosized
    islands on surfaces
  • Surfaces are not simply a static media onto
    which the
  • deposited atoms and diffuse

Deposition and nucleation on a surface is
important
10
III. Applications ii) binary alloys
29
FeCr, CoCr, and NiCr Structural and magnetic
properties
11
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
30
Semi-Heusler alloys
  • Half-metallic materials possess 100 electron
    polarization at the Fermi energy.
  • New class of magnetic materials displaying
    metallic character for one electron spin
    population and insulating character for the
    other.
  • Technological interest as potential pure spin
    sources for use in spintronic devices, data
    storage applications, and magnetic sensors.
  • Difficult to confirm experimentally the
    half-metallicity charcter (clean stoichiometric
    surfac).
  • To known if the intermettallic alloys based on a
    ferromagnet -Ti -Cr can lead to a
    half-metallicity behavior.

12
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
31
Semi-Heusler alloys
Ground states from total energy calculations
  • FeCoTi, CoTiCr, NiTiCr, and FeCoNi are predicted
    ferromagnetic.
  • FeNiTi, FeNiCr, FeTiCr, and FeCoCr and are
    predicted antiferromagnetic.
  • FeCoCr and FeNiCr are nonmagnetic.

13
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
32
Semi-Heusler alloys
Total DOS
  • All alloys are polarized except FeNiCr and
    CoTiCr.
  • FeCoTi, FeNiTi, and NiTiCr have a majority spin
    in a deep minimum right the Fermi level, leading
    to a pseudo-gap which is responsible for 100
    electron polarization.

14
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
33
Heusler alloys
  • Stoichiometric composition X2YZ
  • Electronic structure can range from metallic to
    semi-metallic or semiconducting behavior.
  • Half-metallic ferromagnetism, in which the
    bandstructure for majority electrons is metallic
    while the bandstructure for minority electrons is
    insulating.
  • Anomalous peak in the yield stress and high
    temperature strength and excellent oxidation and
    corrosion resistance.

15
34
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
Heusler alloys
  • All alloys are ferromagnetic, except Co2AlTi and
    Ni2AlTi (paramagnetic).
  • Large magnetization in Cr alloys .

16
35
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
Heusler alloys
Lattice parameters and bulk modulii
  • Cr has induced a volume contraction although
    Z(Ti) lt Z(Cr).
  • This fact is due to changes in bonding.
  • Cr has allso induced large bulk modulii except
    ofr Ni2AlCr (large magnitzation, hgh volume)

17
36
III. Applications iii) Ternary alloys
Heusler alloys
Total DOS
  • Cr has induced Fermi displacement to the right
    (anti-bonding states) with a prounounced
    half-metallicity character in Fe2AlCr and to the
    left in Co2AlCr and Ni2AlCr.

18
III. Applications
37
  • i) Transition element family
  • ii) Binary systems
  • iii) Ternary systems
  • iv) Layered structures
  • Clean V(001), Cr(001) and Fe (100) surfaces
  • TM/5Cr(001) (TM Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni)
  • Fe/Cr(001) systems

19
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
38
  • Interesting properties (GMR, MAE, high local
    moments ) when ferromagnetic and
    antiferromagnetic transition elements are
    layered.
  • Determination of interlayer exchange coupling
    (IEC).
  • Effect of magnetism in surface, interface, and
    superlattices phenomena
  • Ferromagnetic substrates are well studied
    Cu(001), Ag(001), Au(001), Fe(001), Co(001) but
    not antiferromagnetic Cr !!!

Vacuum
Vacuum
20
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
39
Clean V(001), Cr(001), and Fe(001) surfaces
  • Surface magnetism in the (001) direction
    nonmagnetic V, antiferromagnetic Cr, and
    ferromagnetic Fe. 5-layers of V(001), Fe(001) and
    Cr(001) in repeated slab structure.
  • Magnetism occurs in V and is enhanced in Cr and
    Fe (001) surfaces because of the lying bonds
    (coordination number).

M3 (Surface)
M3
M2 (Sub-surface)
M1 (Central)
Z0
21
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
40
TM on 5-Cr(001) layers (TM Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe,
Co, Ni)
  • Several theoretical and experimental studies
    were devoted to the surface properties of the
    magnetic 3d transition metal grown on noble metal
    (Cu, Ag, and Au) and ferromagnetic (Fe, Co, and
    Ni) but not Cr(001).
  • Study of total and surface energies of Cr(001)
    films, magnetic, and electronic properties of 3d
    transition-metal (Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni)
    monolayer on Cr(001), with two opposite spin
    orientations leading to ferromagnetic and
    antiferromagnetic configurations.

22
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
41
TM on 5-Cr(001) layers (TM Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe,
Co, Ni)
Difference in total energy
Ti, V, Cr ferromagnetic coupled
Fe, Co, and Ni antiferromagnetic coupled
TM
Cr (S)
Nothing about Mn (ferrimagnetic coupled ???!)
23
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
42
TM on 5-Cr(001) layers (TM Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe,
Co, Ni)
Transition metal and total magnetic moment
  • TM s magnetic moment increases from Ti to Mn
    and decrease from Mn to Ni, in both ferromagnetic
    and antiferromagnetic configurations.
  • Mn deposition induces the highest value,
    followed by Fe, Co, and Ni.
  • Total magnetic moment has the same behavior as TM
    magnetic moment.

24
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
43
TM on 5-Cr(001) layers (TM Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe,
Co, Ni)
Spin Density Waves in Cr thin films
The periodic nature the oscillations in
7-Cr(001) is strongly related to the itinerant
linear Spin-Density Waves (observed in Cr
multilayers, bulk Cr and its alloys.
Cr thin films need SDW to have antiferromagnetic
ground state.
25
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
44
TM on 5-Cr(001) layers (TM Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe,
Co, Ni)
  • Several theoretical and experimental studies
    were devoted to the surface properties of the
    magnetic 3d transition metal grown on noble metal
    (Cu, Ag, and Au) and ferromagnetic (Fe, Co, and
    Ni) but not Cr(001).
  • Study of total and surface energies of Cr(001)
    films, magnetic, and electronic properties of 3d
    transition-metal (Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni)
    monolayer on Cr(001), with two opposite spin
    orientations leading to ferromagnetic and
    antiferromagnetic configurations.

26
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
45
Fe/Cr(001) systems
  • Study of the diffusion, the surface alloy
    formation, and the magnetic properties in
    Fe/Cr(001) systems and magnetic properties of
    Fen/Crn(001) superlattices.
  • Fe/Cr multilayer exhibit interlayer exchange
    coupling (IEC), giant magneto-resistance (GMR),
    etc.
  • Experimental results, obtained by similar
    techniques, often contradict each another and
    theoretical calculations also demonstrated a very
    complex behavior and solutions with close
    energies.

27
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
46
Fe/Cr(001) systems
Total energies and total and partial magnetic
moments
28
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
47
Fe/Cr(001) systems
Bilayer formation against the monolayer formation
  • This energy is positive (0.54 mRy/unit cell) in
    the ferromagnetic state and negative (-8.10
    mRy/atom) in the nonmagnetic state.
  • This means that magnetic moments allow BL
    formation (2Fe/2Cr(001)), whereas nonmagnetic
    state favors ML formation (1Fe/3Cr(001)).
  • This result contradicts the description which
    was discussed for Cr (ML) on Fe(001) substrate,
    where ML formation is preferred for the
    ferromagnetic configuration.

29
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
48
Fe/Cr(001) systems
Diffusion and surface alloy formation against
phase separation
  • Fe do not diffuse to Cr bulk layers.
  • No magnetism favors phase separation or
    clustering, whereas magnetism favors formation
    of Fe50Cr50/3Cr(001) followed by
    Fe/Fe50Cr50/3Cr(001) ordered surface alloys
    (confirmed in recent experimental study).

30
III. Applications iv) Layered
structures
50
Fe/Cr(001) systems
Fen/Crn(001) superlattices
  • The formation energy is stabilized after n 4.
  • The total magnetic moment is growing with the
    number of Fe and Cr layers.
  • Total energies favor the following spin
    alignments /, /--, /-, /--,
    /---.

31
V. Conclusion
51
  • We have given additional results to structural,
    electronic, and magnetic properties the selected
    transition materials (Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, and
    Ni) and their related systems binary alloys,
    ternary alloys in Half-Heusler and Heusler
    structures, thin films and superlattices.
  • We have shown the importance of d-states in the
    ground state properties in these systems.
  • We have also studied the equilibrium parameters
    and the stability mechanism from the different
    formation energies and from the position of the
    Fermi level in the density of states.
  • The new form of the GGA approximation is adequate
    for transition metals and their related alloys.
  • The obtained structural properties are in good
    agreement with experimental data and more
    efficient than LDA ones.

32
V Conclusion
52
Binary alloys
  • In the binary systems XTi and XCr (XFe, Co, Ni),
    effects of magnetism is studied and related to
    the structural and electronic structures.
  • The martensitic transformation (MT) phenomena of
    NiTi have been studied and optimized lattice
    parameters for B19 were given.
  • The different roles of d-states were highlighted
    and are totally responsible for unexpected and
    controversial behaviors.

33
V Conclusion
53
Ternary alloys
  • Structural parameters, formation energies,
    magnetic moments, and electronic properties of
    XYZ Half-heusler and X2AlX Heusler alloys (XFe,
    Co, Ni XTi, Cr) were presented.
  • The obtained results of lattice parameters and
    local magnetic moments agree very well with the
    experimental results.
  • Cr sites carry large magnetic moments and the
    moments at the X sites are usually small, when
    compared to Ti substitution.
  • All the densities of states are marked by a
    pseudogap left the Fermi level, except for
    Fe2AlTi where the pseudogap is right EF.
  • Among the selected materials, the Fe2AlCr and
    Co2AlCr alloys present a pronounced
    half-metallicity character.

34
V Conclusion
54
Layered structures
  • The existence of itinerant linear Spin-Density
    Wave (SDW) is responsible for antiferromagnetic
    coupling between two adjacent Cr layers in
    Cr(001).
  • Mn overlayer induces the highest magnetic moments
    and relies between two opposite spin alignments
    in TM/Cr(001). Ferrimagnetic (FI) coupling can
    occur. Further investigations within the c(2x2)
    unit cell are necessary.
  • Ti, V, and Cr overlayers are antiferromagnetically
    coupled to the Cr sub-surface layer Mn, Fe, Co
    and Ni are ferromagnetically coupled.
  • Fe layers are always antiferromagnetically
    coupled to Cr layers in Fe/Cr systems.
  • Fe atoms prefer to be deposited as an overlayer
    rather than being diffused in the Cr layers with
    formation of an ordered surface alloy.
  • Magnetism is responsible for the BL formation and
    ordered surface alloying in Fe/Cr (GMR, Colossal
    RM)

35
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