Tunnelling anisotropic magnetoresistance effect of single adatoms on a noncollinear magnetic surface
Nuala M. Caffrey, Silke Schr\"oder, Paolo Ferriani, Stefan Heinze

TL;DR
This study investigates the tunnelling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) effect at the single-atom level on a noncollinear magnetic surface, revealing significant anisotropy enhancements for heavy transition-metal adatoms through first-principles calculations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the TAMR effect at the single-atom scale on a noncollinear magnetic surface and predicts large anisotropy enhancements for heavy transition-metal adatoms.
Findings
TAMR effect can reach up to 50% for certain adatoms.
Heavy transition-metal adatoms significantly enhance TAMR anisotropy.
The effect is measurable with non-magnetic STM tips.
Abstract
The tunnelling anisotropic magnetoresistance (TAMR) effect describes the sensitivity of spin-polarized electron transport to the orientation of the magnetization with respect to the crystallographic axes. As the TAMR effect requires only a single magnetic electrode, in contrast to the tunnelling magnetoresistance effect, it offers an attractive route towards alternative spintronics applications. In this work we consider the TAMR effect at the single-atom limit by investigating the anisotropy of the local density of states in the vacuum above transition-metal adatoms adsorbed on a noncollinear magnetic surface, the monolayer of Mn on W(110). This surface presents a cycloidal spin spiral ground state with an angle of 173 between neighbouring spins and thus allows a quasi-continuous exploration of the angular dependence of the TAMR of adsorbed adatoms using scanning tunnelling…
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