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Hard x-ray standing-wave photoemission insights into the structure of an epitaxial Fe/MgO multilayer magnetic tunnel junction

Authors :
Conlon, C. S.
Conti, G.
Nemšák, S.
Palsson, G.
Moubah, R.
Kuo, C. -T.
Gehlmann, M.
Ciston, J.
Rault, J.
Rueff, J. -P.
Salmassi, F.
Stolte, W.
Rattanachata, A.
Lin, S. -C.
Keqi, A.
Saw, A.
Hjörvarsson, B.
Fadley, C. S.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Fe/MgO magnetic tunnel junction is a classic spintronic system, with current importance technologically, and interest for future innovation. The key magnetic properties are linked directly to the structure of hard-to-access buried interfaces, and the Fe and MgO components near the surface are unstable when exposed to air, making a deeper probing, non-destructive, in-situ measurement ideal for this system. We have thus applied hard x-ray photoemission spectroscopy (HXPS) and standing-wave (SW) HXPS in the few keV energy range to probe the structure of an epitaxially-grown MgO/Fe superlattice. The superlattice consists of 9 repeats of MgO grown on Fe by magnetron sputtering on an MgO (001) substrate, with a protective Al2O3 capping layer. We determine through SW-HXPS that 8 of the 9 repeats are similar and ordered, with a period of 33 $\pm$ 4 angstrom, with minor presence of FeO at the interfaces and a significantly distorted top bilayer with ca. 3 times the oxidation of the lower layers at the top MgO/Fe interface. There is evidence of asymmetrical oxidation on the top and bottom of the Fe layers. We find agreement with dark-field scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) and x-ray reflectivity measurements. Through the STEM measurements we confirm an overall epitaxial stack with dislocations and warping at the interfaces of ca. 5 angstrom. We also note a distinct difference in the top bilayer, especially MgO, with possible Fe inclusions. We thus demonstrate that SW-HXPS can be used to probe deep buried interfaces of novel magnetic devices with few angstrom precision.<br />Comment: 37 pages, 13 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1904.04999
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5089556