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Tag: 2024

Giant spin-charge conversion in ultrathin films of the MnPtSb half-Heusler compound

E. Longo et al. Giant Spin-Charge Conversion in Ultrathin Films of the MnPtSb Half-Heusler Compound. Advanced Functional Materials 2407968 (2024)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202407968

Abstract:

Half-metallic half-Heusler compounds with strong spin-orbit-coupling and broken inversion symmetry in their crystal structure are promising materials for generating and absorbing spin-currents, thus enabling the electric manipulation of magnetization in energy-efficient spintronic devices. In this work, we report the spin-to-charge conversion in the sputtered half-Heusler MnPtSb within thickness (t) range from 1 to 6 nm. A combination of X-ray and transmission electron microscopy measurements evidence the epitaxial nature of these ultrathin non-centrosymmetric layers, with a clear (111)-orientation on top of (0001) single-crystal sapphire. By broadband ferromagnetic resonance (FMR), we observe a four orders of magnitude tunable spin accumulation in the MnPtSb-based heterostructures, within t=1-6 nm range. By using spin pumping FMR, we measure a remarkable t-dependent spin-charge conversion in the MnPtSb layers, which clearly demonstrates the interfacial origin of the conversion. When interpreted within the inverse Edelstein effect (IEE), the spin-charge conversion efficiency extracted at room temperature for the thinnest MnPtSb layer reaches λIEE~3 nm, representing an extremely high conversion at room temperature. The still never explored ultrathin regime of the MnPtSb films studied in this work and the discovery of their outstanding functionality are two ingredients which demonstrate the potentiality of such materials for future applications in spintronics. 

Prof. Kyle Shen deliveres a talk at ICMAB entitled “Thin Film Nickelates: A New Frontier for High-Temperature Superconductivity”

Prof. Kyle Shen, from the Department of Physics at Cornell University, deliveres a talk at ICMAB entitled “Thin Film Nickelates: A New Frontier for High-Temperature Superconductivity”.

Here the abstract about the talk:

Superconductivity plays a key role in many next-generation technologies, including quantum computing and sensing. The promise of discovering new superconductors with higher transition temperatures has been at the forefront of research in condensed matter physics, materials science, and solid state chemistry for the past 4 decades. From the high-temperature cuprate superconductors of the 1990s, to the iron-based superconductors of the 2010s, significant attention has now been directed in the past few years to the nickelate families of superconductors, particularly the so-called “infinite layer” nickelates as well as the recently discovered bilayer nickelate, La3Ni2O7.

In this seminar, I will describe recent advances in the study of the infinite-layer and bilayer nickelate superconductors. I will highlight new thin film synthesis approaches developed by our research group, and how this enables investigations of superconductivity and the phase diagram of both these families.

PhD Student Mario Villa delivered two oral presentations at the EMRS 2024 Spring meeting in held in Strasbourg last May.

MULFOX’ PhD Student Mario Villa contributed with two oral presentations entitled “Large photoresponse and grain boundaries of LaFeO3-based heterojunctions” and “Microstructural domain mapping of LaFeO3-based heterojunctions” within the Advanced PV material characterization and Analytical techniques for accurate nanoscale characterization of advanced materials symposiums respectively during the EMRS Spring meeting held in Strasbourg, France during May, 2024. 

Unfolding the Challenges To Prepare Single Crystalline Complex Oxide Membranes by Solution Processing

Pol Salles, Roger Guzman, Huan Tan, Martí Ramis, Ignasi Fina, Pamela Machado, Florencio Sánchez, Gabriele De Luca, Wu Zhou, and Mariona Coll

ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2024 (2024)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c05013

The ability to prepare single crystalline complex oxide freestanding membranes has opened a new playground to access new phases and functionalities not available when they are epitaxially bound to the substrates. The water-soluble Sr3Al2O6 (SAO) sacrificial layer approach has proven to be one of the most promising pathways to prepare a wide variety of single crystalline complex oxide membranes, typically by high vacuum deposition techniques. Here, we present solution processing, also named chemical solution deposition (CSD), as a cost-effective alternative deposition technique to prepare freestanding membranes identifying the main processing challenges and how to overcome them. In particular, we compare three different strategies based on interface and cation engineering to prepare CSD (00l)-oriented BiFeO3 (BFO) membranes. First, BFO is deposited directly on SAO but forms a nanocomposite of Sr–Al–O rich nanoparticles embedded in an epitaxial BFO matrix because the Sr–O bonds react with the solvents of the BFO precursor solution. Second, the incorporation of a pulsed laser deposited La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 (LSMO) buffer layer on SAO prior to the BFO deposition prevents the massive interface reaction and subsequent formation of a nanocomposite but migration of cations from the upper layers to SAO occurs, making the sacrificial layer insoluble in water and withholding the membrane release. Finally, in the third scenario, a combination of LSMO with a more robust sacrificial layer composition, SrCa2Al2O6 (SC2AO), offers an ideal building block to obtain (001)-oriented BFO/LSMO bilayer membranes with a high-quality interface that can be successfully transferred to both flexible and rigid host substrates. Ferroelectric fingerprints are identified in the BFO film prior and after membrane release. These results show the feasibility to use CSD as alternative deposition technique to prepare single crystalline complex oxide membranes widening the range of available phases and functionalities for next-generation electronic devices.

Invited Talks by Gyanendra Singh and Gervasi Herranz at the 7th International Workshop on Complex Oxides, Cargèse, Corsica

We are pleased to announce that Gyanendra Singh and Gervasi Herranz will be delivering invited talks at the 7th International Workshop on Complex Oxides in Cargèse, Corsica. Gyanendra Singh will discuss “Stoichiometric Control of 2D Superconductivity and Mobility at SrTiO3-Based Interfaces,” while Gervasi Herranz will present on “Spin-Orbit Entanglement Driven by the Jahn-Teller Effect.” Join us for these insightful sessions on groundbreaking research in complex oxides!

The 3rd ICMAB School on Berry and Rashba Physics in Quantum Confined Systems 2024 has concluded

The School was held on 30 and 31 May 2024, and had a participation of 150 attendants, among them 36 in-person and 114 online.

The school included a seminar on “Signatures of a spin-orbital chiral metal” by Mario Cuoco on 29th May. It was followed by lectures on 30th and 31th May by Annika Johansson, Andrea Caviglia and Mario Cuoco, which motivated lively discussions, comments and suggested intriguing prospectives.

Mariona Coll and her team members participated at the EMRS Spring meeting 2024

Karla Mena, Martí Ramis, Mariona Coll and former member of the team Pol Sallés participated at the EMRS Spring meeting held in Strasburg May 2024
Karla Mena presented an oral contribution on multiferroic composites for energy harvesting, Martí Ramis presented a poster on nanomechanical properties of manganite membranes on plastic substrates, Mariona Coll delivered an invited talk on the opportunities of chemical methods to prepare freestanding complex oxide membranes and Pol Sallés presented an invited talk on the challenges to prepare BiFeO3 membranes by chemical solution deposition.

We welcome Takayuki, Weronika, and Teodor in MULFOX to work on spintronics materials and devices

Dr. Takayuki Shiino and Dr. Weronika Janus joined MULFOX as postdoctoral researchers, and Teodor Apetrei joined as a Ph.D. candidate. We warmly welcome them to the group and wish them success.

Takayuki received his BSc in Physics (2013) and MSc in Materials Science and Engineering (2016) from Tokyo Institute of Technology (Japan) and KAIST (South Korea), respectively. He received his Ph.D. from Nagoya University (Japan) in 2019 with a thesis on a quantum critical phenomenon in heavy-fermion materials. After the PhD, he experienced two postdoctoral researches: Uppsala University (2019 – 2021, Sweden) and KAIST (2022 – 2024, South Korea) for the studies of quasicrystals and spintronics, respectively. His postdoctoral research at MULFOX focuses on spintronic devices with insulating ferrimagnetic materials.

Weronika studied at AGH University of Krakow, Poland, where she obtained her BSc in Biomedical Engineering (2018), MSc in Biomedical Engineering – Bionanotechnology (2019), and PhD in Physics (2014). During her PhD, she focused on the strain manipulation of magnetic properties in antiferromagnetic thin films. Her current research interest is in developing innovative magnetic insulator-based spintronic memory devices, where the information can be written and read by all-electrical means

Teodor obtained his BSc. degree in Computational Physics at University Alexandru Ioan Cuza Iasi (Romania, 2020) and his MSc. degree in Applied and Engineering Physics at Technische Universitat Munchen (Germany, 2023). The main focus of his current research is the growth and engineering of magnetic oxide and nitride thin films by magnetron sputtering with tunable interfacial chiral magnetism and perpendicular anisotropy.

We organize an international School on Topological Interfaces, 30-31 May 2024, ICMAB-CSIC Barcelona

This is the 3rd Edition of “ICMAB Schools on Frontiers in Materials Science and Condensed Matter”. Previous editions were “Angle Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy (https://arpes2023.icmab.es/)” and “Orbital currents in solids (https://orbitalcurrents2023.icmab.es/)”

More information at https://topologicalinterfaces2024.icmab.es/

2024

Giant spin-charge conversion in ultrathin films of the MnPtSb half-Heusler compound
E. Longo, A. Markou, C. Felser, M. Belli, A. Serafini, P. Targa, D. Codegoni, M. Fanciulli, R. Mantovan Advanced Functional Materials 2407968 (2024)

Stoichiometric control of electron mobility and 2D superconductivity at LaAlO3-SrTiO3 interfaces
G. Singh, R. Guzman, G. Saïz, W. Zhou, J. Gazquez, F. Masoudinia, D. Winkler, T. Claeson, J. Fraxedas, N. Bergeal, G. Herranz & A. Kalaboukhov 
Communications Physics (2024)

Absence of 3a0 charge density wave order in the infinite-layer nickelate NdNiO2
C. T. Parzyck, N. K. Gupta, Y. Wu, V. Anil, L. Bhatt, M. Bouliane, R. Gong, B. Z. Gregory, A. Luo, R. Sutarto, F. He, Y.-D. Chuang, T. Zhou, G. Herranz, L. F. Kourkoutis, A. Singer, D. G. Schlom, D. G. Hawthorn, and K. M. Shen
Nat. Mater. (2024)

Unfolding the Challenges To Prepare Single Crystalline Complex Oxide Membranes by Solution Processinge order in the infinite-layer nickelate NdNiO2
Pol Salles, Roger Guzman, Huan Tan, Martí Ramis, Ignasi Fina, Pamela Machado, Florencio Sánchez, Gabriele De Luca, Wu Zhou, and Mariona Coll
ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2024

2024

REGULAR TALKS

Electromagnetic detection of spin-orbit entangled states in Jahn-Teller Mn3+ ions*
Gervasi Herranz
APS March Meeting 2024
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2024

Stoichiometric control of 2D superconductivity and mobility at SrTiO3-based interfaces
Gyanendra Singh
APS March Meeting 2024
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, 2024

Large photoresponse and grain boundaries of LaFeO3-based heterojunctions
Mario Villa
EMRS Spring meeting
Strasbourg, France, 2024

Microstructural domain mapping of LaFeO3-based heterojunctions
Mario Villa
EMRS Spring meeting
Strasbourg, France, 2024

Gervasi Herranz and Gyanendra Singh participate in the APS March Meeting 2024

Gervasi Herranz delivers a talk (IN-PERSON MEETING) on 6th March at 2:18 PM at the APS March Meeting 2024 (Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) in Session N04: Ordering Phenomena in Spin-Orbit Coupled Systems

Room: L100D The talk is N04.00011 : Electromagnetic detection of spin-orbit entangled states in Jahn-Teller Mn3+ ions”.
Gyanendra Singh delivers a talk (VIRTUAL MEETING) on 6th March at 12:30 PM the APS March Meeting 2024 (Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) Abstract: HH05.00006 : Stoichiometric control of 2D superconductivity and mobility at SrTiO3-based interfaces.

Absence of 3a0 charge density wave order in the infinite-layer nickelate NdNiO2

C. T. Parzyck, N. K. Gupta, Y. Wu, V. Anil, L. Bhatt, M. Bouliane, R. Gong, B. Z. Gregory, A. Luo, R. Sutarto, F. He, Y.-D. Chuang, T. Zhou, G. Herranz, L. F. Kourkoutis, A. Singer, D. G. Schlom, D. G. Hawthorn & K. M. Shen

Nat. Mater. (2024)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41563-024-01797-0

A hallmark of many unconventional superconductors is the presence of many-body interactions that give rise to broken-symmetry states intertwined with superconductivity. Recent resonant soft X-ray scattering experiments report commensurate 3a0 charge density wave order in infinite-layer nickelates, which has important implications regarding the universal interplay between charge order and superconductivity in both cuprates and nickelates. Here we present X-ray scattering and spectroscopy measurements on a series of NdNiO2+x samples, which reveal that the signatures of charge density wave order are absent in fully reduced, single-phase NdNiO2. The 3a0 superlattice peak instead originates from a partially reduced impurity phase where excess apical oxygens form ordered rows with three-unit-cell periodicity. The absence of any observable charge density wave order in NdNiO2 highlights a crucial difference between the phase diagrams of cuprate and nickelate superconductors.