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Strong Interfacial Coupling of Tunable Ni-NiO Nanocomposite Thin Films Formed by Self-Decomposition.

Xuejing WangZhimin QiJuncheng LiuHaohan WangXiaoshan XuXinghang ZhangHaiyan Wang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
The next-generation spintronic devices including memristors, tunneling devices, or stochastic switching exert surging demands on magnetic nanostructures with novel coupling schemes. Taking advantage of a phase decomposition mechanism, a unique Ni-NiO nanocomposite has been demonstrated using a conventional pulsed laser deposition technique. Ni nanodomains are segregated from NiO and exhibit as faceted "emerald-cut" morphologies with tunable dimensions affected by the growth temperature. The sharp interfacial transition between ferromagnetic (002) Ni and antiferromagnetic (002) NiO, as characterized by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, introduces a strong exchange bias effect and magneto-optical coupling at room temperature. In situ heating-cooling X-ray diffraction (XRD) study confirms an irreversible phase transformation between Ni and NiO under ambient atmosphere. Synthesizing highly functional two-phase nanocomposites with a simple bottom-up self-assembly via such a phase decomposition mechanism presents advantages in terms of epitaxial quality, surface coverage, interfacial coupling, and tunable nanomagnetism, which are valuable for new spintronic device implementation.
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