Strong ferromagnetism at the surface of an antiferromagnet caused by buried magnetic moments

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Abstract

Carrying a large, pure spin magnetic moment of 7 μB per atom in the half-filled 4f shell, divalent europium is an outstanding element for assembling novel magnetic devices in which a two-dimensional electron gas may be polarized due to exchange interaction with an underlying magnetically-active Eu layer. Here we show that the Si-Rh-Si surface trilayer of the antiferromagnet EuRh 2 Si 2 bears a surface state, which exhibits an unexpected and large spin splitting controllable by temperature. The splitting sets in below ∼32.5 K, well above the ordering temperature of the Eu 4f moments (∼24.5 K) in the bulk, indicating a larger ordering temperature in the topmost Eu layers. The driving force for the itinerant ferromagnetism at the surface is the aforementioned exchange interaction. Such a splitting may also be induced into states of functional surface layers deposited onto the surface of EuRh 2 Si 2 or similarly ordered magnetic materials with metallic or semiconducting properties. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Chikina, A., Höppner, M., Seiro, S., Kummer, K., Danzenbächer, S., Patil, S., … Vyalikh, D. V. (2014). Strong ferromagnetism at the surface of an antiferromagnet caused by buried magnetic moments. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4171

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