Control of Mooij correlations at the nanoscale in the disordered metallic Ta - nanoisland FeNi multilayers
N.N. Kovaleva, F.V. Kusmartsev, A.B. Mekhiya, I.N. Trunkin, D., Chvostova, A.B. Davydov, L.N. Oveshnikov, O. Pacherova, I.A. Sherstnev, A., Kusmartseva, K.I. Kugel, A. Dejneka, F.A. Pudonin, Y. Luo, and B.A. Aronzon

TL;DR
This study investigates how nanoscale multilayered structures of disordered Ta and magnetic FeNi nanoislands exhibit localization phenomena affecting electronic transport, revealing effects below the MIR limit linked to quantum localization.
Contribution
It provides new insights into localization phenomena in disordered metallic multilayers and demonstrates how magnetic nanoisland layers influence electron delocalization and conductivity.
Findings
Localization causes reduced Drude response and new electronic excitations.
Increasing FeNi thickness leads to electron delocalization.
Discontinuous FeNi nanoislands cause conductivity below MIR limit.
Abstract
Localisation phenomena in highly disordered metals close to the extreme conditions determined by the Mott-Ioffe-Regel (MIR) limit when the electron mean free path is approximately equal to the interatomic distance is a challenging problem. Here, to shed light on these localisation phenomena, we studied the dc transport and optical conductivity properties of nanoscaled multilayered films composed of disordered metallic Ta and magnetic FeNi nanoisland layers, where ferromagnetic FeNi nanoislands have giant magnetic moments of 10^3-10^5 Bohr magnetons (\mu_B). In these multilayered structures, FeNi nanoisland giant magnetic moments are interacting due to the indirect exchange forces acting via the Ta electron subsystem. We discovered that the localisation phenomena in the disordered Ta layer lead to a decrease in the Drude contribution of free charge carriers and the appearance of the…
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