Conductance fingerprints of non-collinear magnetic states in single atom contacts: a first-principles Wannier functions study
Bj\"orn Hardrat, Frank Freimuth, Stefan Heinze, and Yuriy Mokrousov

TL;DR
This study introduces a first-principles computational approach to analyze how non-collinear magnetic states influence conductance in single-atom contacts, revealing characteristic fingerprints in conductance and magnetoresistance.
Contribution
It develops a novel first-principles scheme combining density functional theory and Wannier functions to investigate non-collinear magnetic transport in nanostructures.
Findings
Conductance dominated by s-dz2 states in tunneling and contact regimes.
Non-collinear spin states significantly affect conductance near contact.
Transition from collinear to non-collinear spins leaves a distinct conductance fingerprint.
Abstract
We present a first-principles computational scheme for investigating the ballistic transport properties of one-dimensional nanostructures with non-collinear magnetic order. The electronic structure is obtained within density functional theory as implemented in the full-potential linearized augmented plane-wave (FLAPW) method and mapped to a tight-binding like transport Hamiltonian via non-collinear Wannier functions. The conductance is then computed based on the Landauer formula using the Green's function method. As a first application we study the conductance between two ferromagnetic Co monowires terminated by single Mn apex atoms as a function of Mn-Mn separation. We vary the Mn-Mn separation from the contact (about 2.5 to 5 {\AA}) to the far tunneling regime (5 to 10 {\AA}). The magnetization direction of the Co electrodes is chosen either in parallel or antiparallel alignment and…
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