Dilute Magnetic Semiconductors
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Transcript Dilute Magnetic Semiconductors
Dilute Magnetic Semiconductors
(DMS)
NAN ZHENG
COURSE: SOLID STATE II
INSTRUCTOR: ELBIO DAGOTTO
SEMESTER: SPRING 2008
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY
THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE
KNOXVILLE
Outline
Introduction: spintronics and DMS
DMS materials
(Ga,Mn)As
(Ga,Mn)N
Transitional metal doped oxide
Magnetic mechanism studied by the Mean Field
Approach
Summary
Introduction: Spintronics and DMS
Spintronics: Spin-based electronics
Idea: a combination of microelectronics and magnetic storage
technique.
Mass Storage
Searching for Materials??
Integrated Circuit
Introduction: Spintronics and DMS
Diluted Magnetic Semiconductor (DMS):
Traditional semiconductors doped with transition
metals
Why “Dilute”?
Small doping concentration (a few %)
Why “Magnetic”?
Display ferromagnetisation
Why “Semiconductor”?
While preserving the semiconducting properties
Introduction: Spintronics and DMS
Criteria of ideal materials for
spintronics:
Room temperature
ferromagnetisation
Fit into current electronic
technique
Theoretical
predictions
by Dietl, Ohno et al.
Various DMS displays room temperature ferromagnetism!
DMS materials I: (Ga,Mn)As
First DMS material, discovered in 1996 by Ohno et al
using molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), a
breakthrough in experiment.
Curie temperature Tc 110 K at optimal doping
Max TC ~ 110K
x ~ .05
[Ohno et al., APL 69, 363 (1996)]
DMS materials I: (Ga,Mn)As
Metal to Insulator Transition (MIT)
Resistance measurements on
samples with different Mn
concentrations:
Metal
R as T
Insulator R as T
MIT happens at TC for
intermediate
Mn
concentrations
(0.035~0.053)
[Ohno, JMMM 200, 110 (1999)]
DMS materials I: (Ga,Mn)As
Annealing Effect (observed in other DMSs as well)
Resistance
decreases
with
annealing time, up to 2 hrs, and then
increases again
WHY??
Two regimes at annealing time
Below 2h, T , FM , metallicity ,
lattice constant
Origin related to defects, details unknown
DMS materials II: (Ga,Mn)N
First room temperature
DMS discovered in 2001 Highest TC
in Dietl’s
using metal organic
chemical vapor deposition prediction
(MOCVD) method.
High curie temperature
Experiment: up to Tc 800K
Theory: up to Tc 940K
DMS materials III:
Transition metal doped oxide
Room temperature
ferromagnetism discovered
in Mn doped ZnO through
reactive magnetron cosputtering and fast
annealing in 2001.
Material:
Mn doped ZnO
Co doped TiO
Reported
TC up to 400K
Hysteresis curve at Room temperature
for Mn doped ZnO(Sn)
Magnetic Mechanism and Physical Properties
Carrier-mediated mechanism:
Interaction between
hole spin and Mn
local moment is
AFM, giving rise to
an effective FM
coupling between
Mn spins
Doping magnetic atoms (eg. Mn: S=5/2)
Itinerant carriers (holes or electrons), s=1/2
[Dietl et al., PRB 55, R3347(1997)]
Magnetic Mechanism and Physical Properties
Two basic approaches to understand magnetism in
DMS
Mean Field Theory based on Zener model
Scenario 1
Scenario 2
Clusters formed by magnetic atoms are responsible for
ferromagnetism
Magnetic Mechanism and Physical Properties
MF approach further
explained:
(A) High carrier density:
Carrier (electrons or holes,
depending on doping)
mediated interaction leads to
ferromagnetism.
(B) Low carrier density:
Percolation network is
formed, carriers hop from
site to site freely, aligning Mn
moments within the cluster
network.
Pearton et al, Mat. Sci. Eng. R 40 (2003)
Magnetic Mechanism and Physical Properties
How good is Mean Field Theory?
Its reliability is case dependent.
Various MFT calculation for (Ga,Mn)As
Various MFT calculation for (Ga,Mn)N
Summary and Outlook
Room temperature DMS already realized, while
explanation on the origin of ferromagnetism still
under refinement.
Further development on mean field approach in
DMS:
Monte Carlo simulations on local moment (eg. Mn)
distribution
Incorporation of defect structures (implied by annealing effect)
Correlation effects in the hole sub-system