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Manipulation of the Anomalous Hall Effect in Altermagnetic MnTe Thin Films

ORAL

Abstract

In altermagnets, the combination of zero net magnetization and features such as the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) and polarized spin currents make them ideal candidates for spintronics devices.1 Recent studies realized this AHE in thin films of semiconducting α-MnTe grown on lattice-matched InP.2,3 In light of these results, the role of point defects and strain remains elusive and warrants further investigation. To clarify the intrinsic material parameters underpinning the AHE, we study α-MnTe grown on both GaAs and SrF2 and achieve substrate-dependent tuning of the AHE in AM MnTe with field cooling.4 We report the synthesis of single-phase MnTe films by MBE and magnetotransport as a function of in-plane field cooling strength. In MnTe on SrF2, we observe a spontaneous AHE (0.09μΩm) at low temperatures (2K), which is insensitive to field cooling and agrees with the expected intrinsic AM origin. In MnTe on GaAs, field cooling tunes the size and polarity of the AHE (0.02-0.1 μΩm). This tunable behavior deviates from predictions based on the symmetry allowed AHE. We suggest substrate-induced strain as a potential origin for this deviation, considering recent DFT calculations predicting that strain can influence the location of the valence band edge in MnTe.5 Overall, this work provides a timely perspective of extrinsic and intrinsic effects tying the substrate to the emergence of a tunable AHE in MnTe.

PhysRevX 12(4) 040501

Phys Rev Lett 130(3) 03670

Adv Funct Mater 2405829

arXiv:2409.04567

PhysRevB 107(10) L100417

Publication: arXiv:2409.04567

Presenters

  • Sara Bey

    University of Notre Dame

Authors

  • Sara Bey

    University of Notre Dame

  • Shelby S Fields

    United States Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Nicholas Glenn Combs

    United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Bence Gabor Markus

    University of Notre Dame, Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter, University of Notre Dame

  • David Beke

    University of Notre Dame

  • Jiashu Wang

    University of Notre Dame

  • Anton V Ievlev

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Center for Nanophase Materials Science, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Maksym Zhukovskyi

    University of Notre Dame, Integrated Imaging Facility, University of Notre Dame

  • Tatyana Orlova

    University of Notre Dame, Integrated Imaging Facility, University of Notre Dame

  • Laszlo Forro

    University of Notre Dame, Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter, University of Notre Dame

  • Steven P Bennett

    United States Naval Research Laboratory

  • Xinyu Liu

    University of Notre Dame

  • Badih A Assaf

    University of Notre Dame