New technologies require growing
precision in the intrinsic properties of the materials used. To meet
increasingly specific requirements, physicists are interested in a
generation of artificial materials, the properties of which can be
controlled. Researchers at the University of Geneva (UNIGE),
Switzerland, in collaboration with French and English teams, have
succeeded in manipulating the properties of two oxides that make up this
artificial material. The researchers modified the magnetic properties,
which can be either ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic; that is, with or
without net magnetic moment. The scientists have demonstrated, in their
study published in Nature Communications, that they can control
the magnetism in this type of material and that they could, in the near
future, offer tailored materials for new technologies.
When two materials
are in contact, they interact in different ways, and sometimes exchange
electrons. But what happens when one stacks up ultrathin layers on the
order of one nanometer? "We have combined two materials, LaNiO3, a metallic paramagnet (without magnetic order), and LaMnO3,
an insulating antiferromagnet, by alternating a layer of the first,
then of the second, etc. We then observed what the influence of
interactions at the interfaces was and we noticed a profound change in
the intrinsic properties of the two materials," said Jean-Marc Triscone,
professor at the department of quantum matter physics in the faculty of
science at UNIGE.
LaNiO3 and LaMnO3 have the same cubic crystalline structure, and thus the researchers can stack the elemental unit cells
of these compounds—that is, the small "cubes" made of just a few
atoms—by using state-of-the-art technology. Then, they create an
artificial structure with a perfect alignment of the unit cells. To do
this, the physicists deposit one unit cell after the other on a
substrate—a small, heated crystal tile. The layers are very thin and
their nanometer thickness is controlled precisely at the unit cell.Goldsmith precision
"In order to realise a perfect structure on the crystal tile, we had to find the exact temperature and pressure conditions required to grow the materials one on top of the other. Then we investigated the properties of the interfaces depending on the number of layers stacked," explained Marta Gibert, researcher in physics at UNIGE and first author of the study. "Measurements of the physical properties then revealed that the properties of LaNiO3 are very different when in contact with LaMnO3. From being a metal without magnetic order, it becomes not only magnetic but also insulating. Moreover, the overall properties of the artificial material depend on the individual thickness of the layer of each material and they can also change as a function of the chosen thickness," she said.
Thanks to this discovery, the researchers are therefore able to control the magnetic state of these materials—a track to build artificial tailored materials according to specific needs in the future. Such control of the magnetic interactions could be used to develop future magnetic memory technology, allowing the high dissipation energy of current processors to be reduced.
This research is not limited to magnetic materials,
but it is also of interest for materials that are simultaneously
magnetic and ferroelectric, suggesting new memory technology or even
superconducting materials working at higher temperatures—a dream which
may be not so distant.
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