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Coexistence of ferromagnetic and superconducting orders and their interplay in ferromagnet-superconductor heterostructures is a topic of intense research. While it is well known that proximity of a ferromagnet suppresses superconducting order in the superconductor, there exist few studies indicating the proximity of a superconductor suppressing ferromagnetic order in a ferromagnet. Here we demonstrate a rare observation of the suppression of ferromagnetic order in a LaCaMnO3 layer separated from a YBa2Cu3O7-{delta} layer by a thin insulator (SrTiO3). Polarized neutron reflectivity measurements on LaCaMnO3SrTiO3YBa2Cu3O7-{delta} trilayer deposited on [001] SrTiO3 single crystal substrates shows the emergence of a thin magnetic dead layer in LaCaMnO3 adjacent to the insulating layer below its superconducting transition temperature of YBa2Cu3O7-{delta}. Further, the magnetic dead layer grows in thickness when the insulating layer is made thinner. This indicates a possible tunneling of the superconducting order-parameter through the insulating SrTiO3 inducing modulation of magnetization in LaCaMnO3.
Using spin polarized neutron reflectivity experiments, we demonstrate an unusual proximity behaviour when the superconductor (SC) and the ferromagnet (FM) are coupled through an insulator (I) in YBa2Cu3O7-{delta} (SC)/SrTiO3 (I)/La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 (FM)
Van der Waals heterostructures have risen as a tunable platform to combine different electronic orders, due to the flexibility in stacking different materials with competing symmetry broken states. Among them, van der Waals ferromagnets such as CrI3
Topological spin configurations in proximity to a superconductor have recently attracted great interest due to the potential application of the former in spintronics and also as another platform for realizing non-trivial topological superconductors.
Superconducting topological crystalline insulators (TCI) are predicted to host new topological phases protected by crystalline symmetries, but available materials are insufficiently suitable for surface studies. To induce superconductivity at the sur
At an interface between a topological insulator (TI) and a conventional superconductor (SC), superconductivity has been predicted to change dramatically and exhibit novel correlations. In particular, the induced superconductivity by an $s$-wave SC in