Excitation of local magnetic moments by tunnelling electrons
Jean-Pierre Gauyacq, Nicolas Lorente, Frederico Dutilh Novaes

TL;DR
This paper discusses how tunneling electrons can excite local magnetic moments in atoms on surfaces, revealing detailed magnetic energy structures using advanced STM techniques and theoretical models.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the mechanisms of magnetic excitation by tunneling electrons and extends theoretical understanding of inelastic magnetic processes at the atomic scale.
Findings
Magnetic energy levels can be excited by tunneling electrons.
Experimental evidence of magnetic excitations in various atomic and molecular systems.
Theoretical models explain the efficiency and nature of magnetic excitations.
Abstract
The advent of milli-kelvin scanning tunneling microscopes (STM) with inbuilt magnetic fields has opened access to the study of magnetic phenomena with atomic resolution at surfaces. In the case of single atoms adsorbed on a surface, the existence of different magnetic energy levels localized on the adsorbate is due to the breaking of the rotational invariance of the adsorbate spin by the interaction with its environment, leading to energy terms in the meV range. These structures were revealed by STM experiments in IBM Almaden in the early 2000's for atomic adsorbates on CuN surfaces. The experiments consisted in the study of the changes in conductance caused by inelastic tunnelling of electrons (IETS, Inelastic Electron Tunnelling Spectroscopy). Manganese and Iron adatoms were shown to have different magnetic anisotropies induced by the substrate. More experiments by other groups…
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