Spin transport in multilayer systems with fully epitaxial NiO thin films
Lorenzo Baldrati, Christoph Schneider, Tomohiko Niizeki, Rafael Ramos,, Joel Cramer, Andrew Ross, Eiji Saitoh, Mathias Kl\"aui

TL;DR
This study investigates thermal spin current generation and transport in epitaxial NiO-based multilayers, revealing how NiO thickness, temperature, and growth conditions influence spin diffusion lengths and the spin Seebeck effect.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of spin diffusion lengths in epitaxial NiO and shows growth conditions significantly affect spin transport properties.
Findings
Spin Seebeck effect generates spin currents in ferrimagnetic films.
Spin diffusion length in NiO is approximately 1.6-3.8 nm depending on material.
Growth conditions impact spin transport, with no significant difference between epitaxial and polycrystalline NiO.
Abstract
We report on the generation and transport of thermal spin currents in fully epitaxial {\gamma}-FeO/NiO(001)/Pt and FeO/NiO(001)/Pt trilayers. A thermal gradient, perpendicular to the plane of the sample, generates a magnonic spin current in the ferrimagnetic maghemite ({\gamma}-FeO) and magnetite (FeO) thin films by means of the spin Seebeck effect. The spin current propagates across the epitaxial, antiferromagnetic insulating NiO layer, before being detected in the Pt layer by the inverse spin Hall effect. The transport of the spin signal is studied as a function of the NiO thickness, temperature and ferrimagnetic material where the spin current is generated. In epitaxial NiO grown on maghemite, the spin Seebeck signal decays exponentially as a function of the NiO thickness, with a spin-diffusion length for thermally-generated magnons of…
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