In the growing field of spintronic devices incorporating antiferromagnetic materials, control of the domain configuration and Néel axis orientation is critical for technological implementations. Here we show by X-ray magnetic linear dichroism in photoelectron emission microscopy how antiferromagnetic properties of LaFeO 3 (LFO) thin films can be tailored through epitaxial strain. LFO films were grown via molecular beam epitaxy with precise stoichiometric control, using substrates that span a range of strain states—from compressive to tensile—and crystal symmetries, including different crystallographic orientations. First, we show that epitaxial strain dictates the Néel axis orientation, shifting it from completely in-plane under compressive strain to completely out-of-plane under tensile strain, regardless of the substrate crystal symmetry. Second, we find that LFO films grown on cubic substrates exhibit a fourfold distribution of antiferromagnetic domains, but can be controlled by varying the substrate miscut, while those on orthorhombic substrates, regardless of strain state, form large-scale monodomains, a highly desirable feature for spintronic applications.
Control of the antiferromagnetic domain configuration and Néel axis orientation with epitaxial strain / V. Polewczyk, A.Y. Petrov, B. Sarpi, D. Backes, H. Elnaggar, P. Wadhwa, A. Filippetti, G. Rossi, P. Torelli, G. Vinai, F. Maccherozzi, B. A. Davidson.. - In: COMMUNICATIONS MATERIALS. - ISSN 2662-4443. - 6:(2025), pp. 153.1-153.10. [10.1038/s43246-025-00836-w]
Control of the antiferromagnetic domain configuration and Néel axis orientation with epitaxial strain
G. Rossi;
2025
Abstract
In the growing field of spintronic devices incorporating antiferromagnetic materials, control of the domain configuration and Néel axis orientation is critical for technological implementations. Here we show by X-ray magnetic linear dichroism in photoelectron emission microscopy how antiferromagnetic properties of LaFeO 3 (LFO) thin films can be tailored through epitaxial strain. LFO films were grown via molecular beam epitaxy with precise stoichiometric control, using substrates that span a range of strain states—from compressive to tensile—and crystal symmetries, including different crystallographic orientations. First, we show that epitaxial strain dictates the Néel axis orientation, shifting it from completely in-plane under compressive strain to completely out-of-plane under tensile strain, regardless of the substrate crystal symmetry. Second, we find that LFO films grown on cubic substrates exhibit a fourfold distribution of antiferromagnetic domains, but can be controlled by varying the substrate miscut, while those on orthorhombic substrates, regardless of strain state, form large-scale monodomains, a highly desirable feature for spintronic applications.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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