BESSY II: Heterostructures for Spintronics

Symbolic illustration of a graphene layer on a microchip. In combination with a heavy-metal thin film and ferromagnetic monolayers, graphene could enable spintronic devices.

Symbolic illustration of a graphene layer on a microchip. In combination with a heavy-metal thin film and ferromagnetic monolayers, graphene could enable spintronic devices. © Dall-E/arö

Spintronic devices work with spin textures caused by quantum-physical interactions. A Spanish-German collaboration has now studied graphene-cobalt-iridium heterostructures at BESSY II. The results show how two desired quantum-physical effects reinforce each other in these heterostructures. This could lead to new spintronic devices based on these materials.

 

Spintronics uses the spins of electrons to perform logic operations or store information. Ideally, spintronic devices could operate faster and more energy-efficiently than conventional semiconductor devices. However, it is still difficult to create and manipulate spin textures in materials.

Graphene for Spintronics

Graphene, a two-dimensional honeycomb structure build by carbon atoms, is considered an interesting candidate for spintronic applications. Graphene is typically deposited on a thin film of heavy metal. At the interface between graphene and heavy metal, a strong spin-orbit coupling develops, which gives rise to different quantum effects, including a spin-orbit splitting of energy levels (Rashba effect) and a canting in the alignment of spins (Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction). Especially the spin canting effect is needed to stabilise vortex-like spin textures, known as skyrmions, which are particularly suitable for spintronics.

Plus Cobalt Monolayers

Now, however, a Spanish-German team has shown that these effects are significantly enhanced when a few monolayers of the ferromagnetic element cobalt are inserted between the graphene and the heavy metal (here: iridium). The samples were grown on insulating substrates which is a necessary prerequisite for the implementation of multifunctional spintronic devices exploiting these effects.

Interactions observed

‘At BESSY II, we have analysed the electronic structures at the interfaces between graphene, cobalt and iridium,’ says Dr. Jaime Sánchez-Barriga, a physicist at HZB. The most important finding: contrary to expectations, the graphene interacts not only with the cobalt, but also through the cobalt with the iridium. ‘The interaction between the graphene and the heavy metal iridium is mediated by the ferromagnetic cobalt layer,’ Sánchez-Barriga explains. The ferromagnetic layer enhances the splitting of the energy levels. ‘We can influence the spin-canting effect by the number of cobalt monolayers; three monolayers are best,’ says Sanchez-Barriga.

This result is supported not only by experimental data, but also by new calculations using density functional theory conducted at Forschungszentrum Jülich. The fact that both quantum effects influence and reinforce each other is new and unexpected.

SPIN-ARPES at BESSY II

‘We were only able to obtain these new insights because BESSY II offers extremely sensitive instruments for measuring photoemission with spin resolution (Spin-ARPES). This leads to the fortunate situation that we can determine the assumed origin of the spin canting, i. e., the Rashba-type spin-orbit splitting, very precisely, probably even more precisely than the spin canting itself.,’ emphasises Prof. Oliver Rader, who heads the “Spin and Topology in Quantum Materials” department at HZB. There are only a very few institutions worldwide that have instruments with these capabilities. The results show that graphene-based heterostructures have great potential for the next generation of spintronic devices.

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Successful master's degree in IR thermography on solar facades
    News
    22.10.2025
    Successful master's degree in IR thermography on solar facades
    We are delighted to congratulate our student employee Luca Raschke on successfully completing her Master's degree in Renewable Energies at the Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin - and with distinction!
  • BESSY II: Phosphorous chains – a 1D material with 1D electronic properties
    Science Highlight
    21.10.2025
    BESSY II: Phosphorous chains – a 1D material with 1D electronic properties
    For the first time, a team at BESSY II has succeeded in demonstrating the one-dimensional electronic properties of a material through a highly refined experimental process. The samples consisted of short chains of phosphorus atoms that self-organise at specific angles on a silver substrate. Through sophisticated analysis, the team was able to disentangle the contributions of these differently aligned chains. This revealed that the electronic properties of each chain are indeed one-dimensional. Calculations predict an exciting phase transition to be expected as soon as these chains are more closely packed. While material consisting of individual chains with longer distances is semiconducting, a very dense chain structure would be metallic.
  • Did marine life in the palaeocene use a compass?
    Science Highlight
    20.10.2025
    Did marine life in the palaeocene use a compass?
    Some ancient marine organisms produced mysterious magnetic particles of unusually large size, which can now be found as fossils in marine sediments. An international team has succeeded in mapping the magnetic domains on one of such ‘giant magnetofossils’ using a sophisticated method at the Diamond X-ray source. Their analysis shows that these particles could have allowed these organisms to sense tiny variations in both the direction and intensity of the Earth’s magnetic field, enabling them to geolocate themselves and navigate across the ocean. The method offers a powerful tool for magnetically testing whether putative biological iron oxide particles in Mars samples have a biogenic origin.