| Literature DB >> 33723249 |
Ather Mahmood1, Will Echtenkamp1, Mike Street1, Jun-Lei Wang1, Shi Cao1, Takashi Komesu1, Peter A Dowben1, Pratyush Buragohain1, Haidong Lu1, Alexei Gruverman1, Arun Parthasarathy2, Shaloo Rakheja3, Christian Binek4.
Abstract
Multi-functional thin films of boron (B) doped Cr2O3 exhibit voltage-controlled and nonvolatile Néel vector reorientation in the absence of an applied magnetic field, H. Toggling of antiferromagnetic states is demonstrated in prototype device structures at CMOS compatible temperatures between 300 and 400 K. The boundary magnetization associated with the Néel vector orientation serves as state variable which is read via magnetoresistive detection in a Pt Hall bar adjacent to the B:Cr2O3 film. Switching of the Hall voltage between zero and non-zero values implies Néel vector rotation by 90 degrees. Combined magnetometry, spin resolved inverse photoemission, electric transport and scanning probe microscopy measurements reveal B-dependent TN and resistivity enhancement, spin-canting, anisotropy reduction, dynamic polarization hysteresis and gate voltage dependent orientation of boundary magnetization. The combined effect enables H = 0, voltage controlled, nonvolatile Néel vector rotation at high-temperature. Theoretical modeling estimates switching speeds of about 100 ps making B:Cr2O3 a promising multifunctional single-phase material for energy efficient nonvolatile CMOS compatible memory applications.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33723249 PMCID: PMC7960997 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21872-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919