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Design of a Vertical Composite Thin Film System with Ultralow Leakage To Yield Large Converse Magnetoelectric Effect

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Electric field control of magnetism is a critical future technology for low-power, ultrahigh density memory. However, despite intensive research efforts, no practical material systems have emerged. Interface-coupled, composite systems containing ferroelectric and ferri-/ferromagnetic elements have been widely explored, but they have a range of problems, for example, substrate clamping, large leakage, and inability to miniaturize. In this work, through careful material selection, design, and nanoengineering, a high-performance room-temperature magnetoelectric system is demonstrated. The clamping problem is overcome by using a vertically aligned nanocomposite structure in which the strain coupling is independent of the substrate. To overcome the leakage problem, three key novel advances are introduced: a low leakage ferroelectric, Na0.5Bi0.5TiO3; ferroelectric–ferrimagnetic vertical interfaces which are not conducting; and current blockage via a rectifying interface between the film and the Nb-doped SrTiO3 substrate. The new multiferroic nanocomposite (Na0.5Bi0.5TiO3–CoFe2O4) thin-film system enables, for the first time, large-scale in situ electric field control of magnetic anisotropy at room temperature in a system applicable for magnetoelectric random access memory, with a magnetoelectric coefficient of 1.25 × 10–9 s m–1.

Description

Journal Title

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1944-8244
1944-8252

Volume Title

10

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/N004272/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/M000524/1)
Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2015-017)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/H047867/1)
We acknowledge funding from the Leverhulme Trust grant # RPG-2015-017, EPSRC grant EP/N004272/1, and EP/M000524/1.