ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Since oxide materials like Sr$_2$FeMoO$_6$ are usually applied as thin films, we studied the effect of biaxial strain, resulting from the substrate, on the electronic and magnetic properties and, in particular, on the formation energy of point defects. From our first-principles calculations, we determined that the probability of forming point defects - like vacancies or substitutions - in Sr$_2$FeMoO$_6$ could be adjusted by choosing a proper substrate. For example, the amount of anti-site disorder can be reduced with compressive strain in order to obtain purer Sr$_2$FeMoO$_6$ as needed for spintronic applications, while the formation of oxygen vacancies is more likely for tensile strain, which improves the functionality of Sr$_2$FeMoO$_6$ as a basis material of solid oxide fuel cells. In addition, we were also be able to include the oxygen partial pressure in our study by using its thermodynamic connection with the chemical potential. Strontium vacancies become for example more likely than oxygen vacancies at a pressure of 1$,$bar. Hence, this degree of freedom might offer in general another potential method for defect engineering in oxides besides, e.g., experimental growth conditions like temperature or gas pressure.
Oxygen vacancies can be of utmost importance for improving or deteriorating physical properties of oxide materials. Here, we studied from first-principles the electronic and magnetic properties of oxygen vacancies in the double perovskite Sr$_2$FeMoO
The phenomenon of ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) provides fundamental information on the physics of magnetic materials and lies at the heart of a variety of signal processing microwave devices. Here we demonstrate theoretically that substrate-induced
We have prepared crystallographically ordered and disorder specimens of the double perovskite, Sr$_2$FeMoO$_6$ and investigated their magnetoresistance behaviour. The extent of ordering between the Fe and Mo sites in the two samples is determined by
We have investigated the magnetic and magnetotransport properties of Ba$_2$FeMoO$_6$ thin films produced by pulsed laser deposition from optimized bulk material. The films are comprised of grains of crystalline Ba$_2$FeMoO$_6$ with a disordered grain
We propose to tailor exchange interactions in magnetic monolayer films by tuning the adjacent non-magnetic substrate. As an example, we demonstrate a ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic phase transition for one monolayer Fe on a Ta(x)W(1-x)(001) surface