Mechanisms and origins of half-metallic ferromagnetism in CrO2
I. V. Solovyev, I. V. Kashin, and V. V. Mazurenko

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complex mechanisms behind the half-metallic ferromagnetism in CrO2, combining first-principles calculations and many-body methods to explain its stability and origins.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive microscopic explanation of CrO2's ferromagnetism by integrating electronic structure calculations with advanced correlation treatments.
Findings
Electron correlations tend to destabilize ferromagnetism in CrO2.
Ferromagnetism reemerges when considering direct exchange and oxygen band polarization.
The study offers a detailed microscopic basis for CrO2's magnetic stability.
Abstract
Chromium dioxide (CrO2) offers a rare example of metallic ferromagnetism among stoichiometric transition-metal oxides. What makes it even more remarkable is the half-metallic electronic structure. Today, CrO2 is widely used in magnetorecording and regarded as a promising spintronic material. Nevertheless, the key question "Why is it ferromagnetic?" remains largely unanswered, despite general interest to the problem and practical importance of CrO2. In the present work we challenge this question by combining first-principles electronic structure calculations with the model Hamiltonian approach and modern many-body methods for treating electron correlations. Our analysis demonstrates that the problem is indeed highly nontrivial: at the first glance, the ferromagnetism in CrO2 can be easily explained by Hund's rule related exchange processes in the narrow t2g band. However, the electron…
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