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Chemical substitution induced half-metallicity in CrMnSb<sub>(1-x)</sub>P<sub>x</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

We report results of a computational work on the half-Heusler compound CrMnSb(1-x)Px. We show that the parent compound CrMnSb is nearly half-metallic, with the onset of the band gap a few meV above the Fermi energy. Moreover, although it undergoes a half-metallic transition under a uniform compression of ~1.5%, such transition is absent under epitaxial strain. The half-metallic transition could be induced by a chemical substitution of Sb with P, which results in a volume reduction of the unit cell. In particular, 50% substitution of Sb with P leads to a robust half-metallicity, with 100% spin polarization being retained at a large range of epitaxial strain. Thus, our results indicate that CrMnSb0.5P0.5 could be grown on different types of substrates, e.g. GaAs, without its electronic properties being detrimentally affected by biaxial strain. In addition, CrMnSb0.5P0.5 exhibits a fully compensated ferrimagnetic alignment, which could be potentially useful in applications where stray magnetic fields are undesirable.

Presenters

  • Adam Ramker

    University of Northern Iowa

Authors

  • Evan O'Leary

    Iowa State University

  • Adam Ramker

    University of Northern Iowa

  • Devon VanBrogen

    University of Northern Iowa

  • Bishnu Dahal

    Univ of District of Columbia, South Dakota State University

  • Eric Montgomery

    Euclid BeamLabs

  • Shashi Poddar

    Euclid BeamLabs

  • Parashu Kharel

    Physics, South Dakota State University, South Dakota State University

  • Andrew Stollenwerk

    University of Northern Iowa

  • Pavel Lukashev

    Physics, University of Northern Iowa, University of Northern Iowa