TY - JOUR
T1 - Room-Temperature Perovskite Ferromagnetic Insulator via Three-Dimensional Tensile Strain
AU - Li, Tianyu
AU - Yang, Yali
AU - Deng, Shiqing
AU - Zhu, Fangyuan
AU - Zhang, Tianfu
AU - Chen, Yu
AU - Wang, Huanhua
AU - Long, Feixiang
AU - Li, Xiaolong
AU - Wang, Jia Ou
AU - Zhu, Tao
AU - Tang, Mingxue
AU - He, Jiangang
AU - Diéguez, Oswaldo
AU - Guo, Er Jia
AU - Chen, Jun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Physical Society.
PY - 2025/1/10
Y1 - 2025/1/10
N2 - Ferromagnetic insulators are receiving ever-increasing research activities driven not only by the unique advantage of low power loss during spin-wave-based information processing but also by the potential to construct next-generation spintronic devices. However, either the exceedingly rare candidates or the low Curie temperature far below room temperature greatly hinder their practical application. Here, through the modulation of a novel three-dimensional (3D) tensile strain, a room-temperature ferromagnetic insulating state with a Curie temperature as high as 594 K is achieved in self-assembled LaCoO3:MgO nanocomposite thin films. Atomically resolved electron microscopy quantifications identify the 3D strain state of the thin film, where the +2.6% out-of-plane and +2.1% in-plane tensile strains are attributed to the interphase mismatch between the LaCoO3 and MgO building blocks and epitaxial constraint, respectively. Combined with the assessment of electronic states and theoretical analysis, we correlate the strain state with the resulting ferromagnetic insulating property and clarify the underlying mechanisms, by which the emergent strain states break the degeneracy of crystal-field splitting and tailor the on-site Coulomb interactions and spin configuration. These findings underscore the efficacy of a three-dimensional strain strategy in engineering the long-desired high-temperature ferromagnetic insulators via the manipulation of strong spin-lattice coupling, providing a promising approach for the exploitation of exotic functionalities in correlated oxides.
AB - Ferromagnetic insulators are receiving ever-increasing research activities driven not only by the unique advantage of low power loss during spin-wave-based information processing but also by the potential to construct next-generation spintronic devices. However, either the exceedingly rare candidates or the low Curie temperature far below room temperature greatly hinder their practical application. Here, through the modulation of a novel three-dimensional (3D) tensile strain, a room-temperature ferromagnetic insulating state with a Curie temperature as high as 594 K is achieved in self-assembled LaCoO3:MgO nanocomposite thin films. Atomically resolved electron microscopy quantifications identify the 3D strain state of the thin film, where the +2.6% out-of-plane and +2.1% in-plane tensile strains are attributed to the interphase mismatch between the LaCoO3 and MgO building blocks and epitaxial constraint, respectively. Combined with the assessment of electronic states and theoretical analysis, we correlate the strain state with the resulting ferromagnetic insulating property and clarify the underlying mechanisms, by which the emergent strain states break the degeneracy of crystal-field splitting and tailor the on-site Coulomb interactions and spin configuration. These findings underscore the efficacy of a three-dimensional strain strategy in engineering the long-desired high-temperature ferromagnetic insulators via the manipulation of strong spin-lattice coupling, providing a promising approach for the exploitation of exotic functionalities in correlated oxides.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85213865360&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.134.016702
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.134.016702
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AN - SCOPUS:85213865360
SN - 0031-9007
VL - 134
JO - Physical Review Letters
JF - Physical Review Letters
IS - 1
M1 - 016702
ER -