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The Effect of Point Defects on the Compensation Temperature of Terbium Iron Garnet Thin Films

ORAL

Abstract

Recently, rare earth iron garnets (REIG) thin films with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) have attracted a great deal of attention for spintronic applications. A subset of REIG materials exhibit magnetic compensation temperatures (Tcomp), which may enable technologically interesting phenomena such as ultrafast domain wall velocities and ultrasmall skyrmions. For example, terbium iron garnet (TbIG) thin films have been grown by pulsed laser deposition with PMA and a Tcomp of ~330 K, and their spin Hall magnetoresistance and spin orbit torque switching characteristics were investigated near compensation. Interestingly, however, the bulk Tcomp­ of TbIG is closer to 250 K – about 80 K lower than the Tcomp of the films. Hypotheses such as Tb antisites and/or iron vacancies have been suggested but have not been rigorously tested. Explaining this phenomenon could guide future efforts to engineer Tcomp­.

In this study, we construct a site occupancy model for TbIG thin films. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy scans reveal off-stoichiometry within the thin film (Tb:Fe =  0.86), implying the presence of iron vacancies. Hartree-Fock calculations are used to fit x-ray magnetic circular dichroism spectra at the Fe L3 edge to extract Fe site occupancies. This information is fed into molecular field simulations which in turn demonstrate that ~15% of the Fe vacancies must be filled by Tb ions to reproduce our observed Tcomp. Our site occupancy model thereby explains the anomalous Tcomp of TbIG thin films.

Presenters

  • Ethan R Rosenberg

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

Authors

  • Ethan R Rosenberg

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

  • Jackson J Bauer

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Connor A Occhialini

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI

  • Jonathan Pelliciari

    BNL, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Richard Rosenberg

    Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Lab

  • John W Freeland

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Frank de Groot

    Utrecht University

  • Riccardo Comin

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Caroline A Ross

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT