Effect of C60 interfaces on the spin transport in heavy metal thin films grown on YIG
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
This research consideres the effect of molecular overlayers on the spin
Hall magnetoresistance (SHMR) and anisotropic magnetoresistance
(AMR) of heavy metals (Pt, Ta, and PtMn). The objective is to
investigate the effect of molecular overlayers on the eective spin orbit
coupling (SOC), i.e. the charge-spin conversion of heavy metals. We
have pursued this objective by measuring the SHMR & the AMR in
YIG/Metal and YIG/Metal/C60 structures. This effect has generated
a large interest over the last few years, and they are critical in the
study of the spin Hall angle and its applications, e.g. for devices such
as spin torque MRAM.
"In this study" when C60 is grown on a metal, the electronic structure
is altered due to hybridisation and charge transfer. A conducting layer
with high SOC is formed at the interface between a heavy metal and
molecules. The SHMR for Pt/C60 and Ta/C60 at room temperature
are up to a factor 6 higher than for the pristine metals, with the spin
Hall angle increased by 20-60 %. At low elds of 1-30 mT, there is
an AMR which increases up to 700 % at room temperature by C60.
Given the dielectric properties of C60, this opens the possibility of
gating the eective SOC of metals, with applications for spin transfer
torque memories and pure spin current dynamic circuits.
Annealing sample plays a crucial part in our transport properties
of (Pt, PtMn) and (Pt, PtMn)/C60 because of changes to the crystallinity
and metallo-molecular coupling at the interface. As a result,
the SHMR/MR can increase by a further factor 4 when annealing at
a temperature of 300 C.