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Giant anisotropic magnetoresistance in oxygen-vacancy-ordered epitaxial La<sub>0.5</sub>Sr<sub>0.5</sub>CoO<sub>3</sub><sub>-δ</sub> films

ORAL

Abstract

Recent advances in complex oxide heterostructures have realized extraordinary control over oxygen vacancies (VO), including strain-tuned VO order, and electric-field-controlled transformations between perovskite and VO-ordered structures. Perovskite cobaltites such as La1-xSrxCoO3-δ provide a prime example, recent work demonstrating that strain engineering of VO ordering induces large (~107 erg/cm3) perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Here we show that VO-ordered epitaxial La0.5Sr0.5CoO3-δ films exhibit not only strong magnetic anisotropy, but also a giant form of anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) [1]. This has magnetic field, temperature, and angular dependencies in quantitative accord with conventional AMR, but with AMR ratios up to an extraordinary 40.3%, 20-times enhanced over bulk cobaltites, and ~10-100 times larger than typical transition metals. This giant AMR has no strong dependence on heteroepitaxial strain (between -2.1% and +1.8%) or thickness, and is instead ascribed to symmetry lowering associated with VO ordering. The AMR ratios thus obtained are among the largest reported in the over 160-year history of this phenomenon, despite the absence of heavy elements.
[1] Walter et al., Phys. Rev. Mater. 4, 091401(R) (2020)

Presenters

  • Jeff Walter

    Augsburg University, Department of Physics, Augsburg University

Authors

  • Jeff Walter

    Augsburg University, Department of Physics, Augsburg University

  • Shameek Bose

    Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota

  • Mariona Cabero

    Dept. de Fisica de Materiales & Instituto Pluridisciplinar, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Centro Nacional de Microscopía Electrónica, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, IMDEA Nanoscience

  • Maria Varela

    Dept. de Fisica de Materiales & Instituto Pluridisciplinar, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Física de Materiales, Universidad Complutense de Madrid

  • Chris Leighton

    University of Minnesota, Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota