Imaging of room-temperature ferromagnetic nano-domains at the surface of a non-magnetic oxide

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Abstract

Two-dimensional electron gases at oxide surfaces or interfaces show exotic ordered states of matter, like superconductivity, magnetism or spin-polarized states, and are a promising platform for alternative oxide-based electronics. Here we directly image a dense population of randomly distributed ferromagnetic domains of ∼40 nm typical sizes at room temperature at the oxygen-deficient surface of SrTiO3, a non-magnetic transparent insulator in the bulk. We use laser-based photoemission electron microscopy, an experimental technique that gives selective spin detection of the surface carriers, even in bulk insulators, with a high spatial resolution of 2.6 nm. We furthermore find that the Curie temperature in this system is as high as 900 K. These findings open perspectives for applications in nano-domain magnetism and spintronics using oxide-based devices, for instance through the nano-engineering of oxygen vacancies at surfaces or interfaces of transition-metal oxides.

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Taniuchi, T., Motoyui, Y., Morozumi, K., Rödel, T. C., Fortuna, F., Santander-Syro, A. F., & Shin, S. (2016). Imaging of room-temperature ferromagnetic nano-domains at the surface of a non-magnetic oxide. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11781

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