Spin Engineering of VO 2 Phase Transitions and Removal of Structural Transition.
Adele MoattiGabrielle Mineo-FoleySiddharth GuptaRitesh SachanJay NarayanPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Vanadium dioxide undergoes a metal-to-insulator transition, where the energy of electron-electron, electron-lattice, spin-spin, and spin-lattice interactions are of the same order of magnitude. This leads to the coexistence of electronic and structural transitions in VO 2 that limit the lifetime and speed of VO 2 -based devices. However, the closeness of interaction energy of lattice-electron-spin can be turned into an opportunity to induce some transitions while pinning others via external stimuli. That is, the contribution of spin, charge, orbital, and lattice degrees of freedom can be manipulated. In this study, spin engineering has been exploited to affect the spin-related interactions in VO 2 by introducing a ferromagnetic Ni layer. The coercivity in the Ni layer is engineered by controlling the shape anisotropy via kinetics of growth. Using spin engineering, the structural pinning of the monoclinic M 2 phase of VO 2 is successfully achieved, while the electronic and magnetic transitions take place.