Atomic-scale inversion of spin polarization at an organic-antiferromagnetic interface
Nuala M. Caffrey, Paolo Ferriani, Simone Marocchi, Stefan Heinze

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to demonstrate atomic-scale modulation and inversion of spin polarization at an organic-antiferromagnetic interface, revealing potential for nanoscale spintronic control.
Contribution
It uncovers how organic molecule adsorption can modulate and invert spin polarization at an antiferromagnetic surface, with simulated SP-STM images showing spatially-dependent spin-resolved charge density.
Findings
Adsorption of molecules reduces Mn magnetic moments.
Spin polarization is modulated and inverted at the interface.
d-states influence vacuum charge density after molecule adsorption.
Abstract
Using first-principles calculations, we show that the magnetic properties of a two-dimensional antiferromagnetic transition-metal surface are modified on the atomic scale by the adsorption of small organic molecules. We consider benzene (C6H6), cyclooctatetraene (C8H8) and a small transition metal - benzene complex (BzV) adsorbed on a single atomic layer of Mn deposited on the W(110) surface -- a surface which exhibits a nearly antiferromagnetic alignment of the magnetic moments in adjacent Mn rows. Due to the spin-dependent hybridization of the molecular pz orbitals with the d states of the Mn monolayer there is a significant reduction of the magnetic moments in the Mn film. Furthermore, the spin-polarization at this organic-antiferromagnetic interface is found to be modulated on the atomic scale, both enhanced and inverted, as a result of the molecular adsorption. We show that this…
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