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Strong Ferromagnetism Achieved via Breathing Lattices in Atomically Thin Cobaltites

Authors :
Li, Sisi
Zhang, Qinghua
Lin, Shan
Sang, Xiahan
Need, Ryan F.
Roldan, Manuel A.
Cui, Wenjun
Hu, Zhiyi
Jin, Qiao
Chen, Shuang
Zhao, Jiali
Wang, Jia-Ou
Wang, Jiesu
He, Meng
Ge, Chen
Wang, Can
Lu, Hui-Bin
Wu, Zhenping
Guo, Haizhong
Tong, Xin
Zhu, Tao
Kirby, Brian
Gu, Lin
Jin, Kui-juan
Guo, Er-Jia
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Low-dimensional quantum materials that remain strongly ferromagnetic down to mono layer thickness are highly desired for spintronic applications. Although oxide materials are important candidates for next generation of spintronic, ferromagnetism decays severely when the thickness is scaled to the nano meter regime, leading to deterioration of device performance. Here we report a methodology for maintaining strong ferromagnetism in insulating LaCoO3 (LCO) layers down to the thickness of a single unit cell. We find that the magnetic and electronic states of LCO are linked intimately to the structural parameters of adjacent "breathing lattice" SrCuO2 (SCO). As the dimensionality of SCO is reduced, the lattice constant elongates over 10% along the growth direction, leading to a significant distortion of the CoO6 octahedra, and promoting a higher spin state and long-range spin ordering. For atomically thin LCO layers, we observe surprisingly large magnetic moment (0.5 uB/Co) and Curie temperature (75 K), values larger than previously reported for any mono layer oxide. Our results demonstrate a strategy for creating ultra thin ferromagnetic oxides by exploiting atomic hetero interface engineering,confinement-driven structural transformation, and spin-lattice entanglement in strongly correlated materials.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, 1 supporting information with 13 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2010.09998
Document Type :
Working Paper