Dimensionality Engineering of Magnetic Anisotropy from the Anomalous Hall Effect in Synthetic SrRuO3 Crystals

Authors
Jeong, Seung GyoCho, Seong WonSong, SehwanOh, Jin YoungJeong, Do GyeomHan, GyeongtakJeong, Hu YoungMohamed, Ahmed YousefNoh, Woo-sukPark, SungkyunLee, Jong SeokLee, SuyounKim, Young-MinCho, Deok-YongChoi, Woo Seok
Issue Date
2024-07
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
Nano Letters, v.24, no.26, pp.7979 - 7986
Abstract
Magnetic anisotropy in atomically thin correlated heterostructures is essential for exploring quantum magnetic phases for next-generation spintronics. Whereas previous studies have mostly focused on van der Waals systems, here we investigate the impact of dimensionality of epitaxially grown correlated oxides down to the monolayer limit on structural, magnetic, and orbital anisotropies. By designing oxide superlattices with a correlated ferromagnetic SrRuO3 and nonmagnetic SrTiO3 layers, we observed modulated ferromagnetic behavior with the change of the SrRuO3 thickness. Especially, for three-unit-cell-thick layers, we observe a significant 1500% improvement of the coercive field in the anomalous Hall effect, which cannot be solely attributed to the dimensional crossover in ferromagnetism. The atomic-scale heterostructures further reveal the systematic modulation of anisotropy for the lattice structure and orbital hybridization, explaining the enhanced magnetic anisotropy. Our findings provide valuable insights into engineering the anisotropic hybridization of synthetic magnetic crystals, offering a tunable spin order for various applications.
Keywords
HETEROSTRUCTURES; SPINTRONICS; Low-dimensional magnetism; SrRuO3; magnetic anisotropy engineering; oxide superlattice; atomic-scale epitaxy; correlated magnetic order
ISSN
1530-6984
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/150061
DOI
10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c01536
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2024
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