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Room-temperature magnetoresistance in an all-antiferromagnetic tunnel junction.

Peixin QinHan YanXiaoning WangHongyu ChenZiang MengJianting DongMeng ZhuJialin CaiZexin FengXiaorong ZhouLi LiuTianli ZhangZhongming ZengJia ZhangChengbao JiangZhiqi Liu
Published in: Nature (2023)
Antiferromagnetic spintronics 1-16 is a rapidly growing field in condensed-matter physics and information technology with potential applications for high-density and ultrafast information devices. However, the practical application of these devices has been largely limited by small electrical outputs at room temperature. Here we describe a room-temperature exchange-bias effect between a collinear antiferromagnet, MnPt, and a non-collinear antiferromagnet, Mn 3 Pt, which together are similar to a ferromagnet-antiferromagnet exchange-bias system. We use this exotic effect to build all-antiferromagnetic tunnel junctions with large nonvolatile room-temperature magnetoresistance values that reach a maximum of about 100%. Atomistic spin dynamics simulations reveal that uncompensated localized spins at the interface of MnPt produce the exchange bias. First-principles calculations indicate that the remarkable tunnelling magnetoresistance originates from the spin polarization of Mn 3 Pt in the momentum space. All-antiferromagnetic tunnel junction devices, with nearly vanishing stray fields and strongly enhanced spin dynamics up to the terahertz level, could be important for next-generation highly integrated and ultrafast memory devices 7,9,16 .
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