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Dive into the research topics where Frithjof Nolting is active.

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Featured researches published by Frithjof Nolting.


Nature | 2000

Direct observation of the alignment of ferromagnetic spins by antiferromagnetic spins

Frithjof Nolting; Andreas Scholl; J. Stöhr; Jin Won Seo; Jean Fompeyrine; Heinz Siegwart; Jean-Pierre Locquet; Simon Anders; J. Lüning; Eric E. Fullerton; Michael F. Toney; Michael R. Scheinfein; Howard A. Padmore

The arrangement of spins at interfaces in a layered magnetic material often has an important effect on the properties of the material. One example of this is the directional coupling between the spins in an antiferromagnet and those in an adjacent ferromagnet, an effect first discovered in 1956 and referred to as exchange bias. Because of its technological importance for the development of advanced devices such as magnetic read heads and magnetic memory cells, this phenomenon has received much attention. Despite extensive studies, however, exchange bias is still poorly understood, largely due to the lack of techniques capable of providing detailed information about the arrangement of magnetic moments near interfaces. Here we present polarization-dependent X-ray magnetic dichroism spectro-microscopy that reveals the micromagnetic structure on both sides of a ferromagnetic–antiferromagnetic interface. Images of thin ferromagnetic Co films grown on antiferromagnetic LaFeO3 show a direct link between the arrangement of spins in each material. Remanent hysteresis loops, recorded for individual ferromagnetic domains, show a local exchange bias. Our results imply that the alignment of the ferromagnetic spins is determined, domain by domain, by the spin directions in the underlying antiferromagnetic layer.


Nature Communications | 2012

Ultrafast heating as a sufficient stimulus for magnetization reversal in a ferrimagnet

Thomas Ostler; Joseph Barker; R. F. L. Evans; R.W. Chantrell; Unai Atxitia; O. Chubykalo-Fesenko; S. El Moussaoui; L. Le Guyader; Elena Mengotti; L. J. Heyderman; Frithjof Nolting; A. Tsukamoto; A. Itoh; D.V. Afanasiev; B.A. Ivanov; A.M. Kalashnikova; K. Vahaplar; Johan H. Mentink; Andrei Kirilyuk; T.H.M. Rasing; A.V. Kimel

The question of how, and how fast, magnetization can be reversed is a topic of great practical interest for the manipulation and storage of magnetic information. It is generally accepted that magnetization reversal should be driven by a stimulus represented by time-non-invariant vectors such as a magnetic field, spin-polarized electric current, or cross-product of two oscillating electric fields. However, until now it has been generally assumed that heating alone, not represented as a vector at all, cannot result in a deterministic reversal of magnetization, although it may assist this process. Here we show numerically and demonstrate experimentally a novel mechanism of deterministic magnetization reversal in a ferrimagnet driven by an ultrafast heating of the medium resulting from the absorption of a sub-picosecond laser pulse without the presence of a magnetic field.


Nature Communications | 2010

Controlling spins in adsorbed molecules by a chemical switch

Christian Wäckerlin; Dorota Chylarecka; Armin Kleibert; Kathrin Müller; Cristian Iacovita; Frithjof Nolting; Thomas A. Jung; Nirmalya Ballav

The development of chemical systems with switchable molecular spins could lead to the architecture of materials with controllable magnetic or spintronic properties. Here, we present conclusive evidence that the spin of an organometallic molecule coupled to a ferromagnetic substrate can be switched between magnetic off and on states by a chemical stimulus. This is achieved by nitric oxide (NO) functioning as an axial ligand of cobalt(II)tetraphenylporphyrin (CoTPP) ferromagnetically coupled to nickel thin-film (Ni(001)). On NO addition, the coordination sphere of Co2+ is modified and a NO–CoTPP nitrosyl complex is formed, which corresponds to an off state of the Co spin. Thermal dissociation of NO from the nitrosyl complex restores the on state of the Co spin. The NO-induced reversible off–on switching of surface-adsorbed molecular spins observed here is attributed to a spin trans effect.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

An endohedral single-molecule magnet with long relaxation times: DySc2N@C80.

Rasmus Westerström; Jan Dreiser; Cinthia Piamonteze; Matthias Muntwiler; S. Weyeneth; Harald Brune; Stefano Rusponi; Frithjof Nolting; Alexey A. Popov; Shangfeng Yang; Lothar Dunsch; Thomas Greber

The magnetism of DySc(2)N@C(80) endofullerene was studied with X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) and a magnetometer with a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) down to temperatures of 2 K and in fields up to 7 T. XMCD shows hysteresis of the 4f spin and orbital moment in Dy(III) ions. SQUID magnetometry indicates hysteresis below 6 K, while thermal and nonthermal relaxation is observed. Dilution of DySc(2)N@C(80) samples with C(60) increases the zero-field 4f electron relaxation time at 2 K to several hours.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2012

X-Treme beamline at SLS: X-ray magnetic circular and linear dichroism at high field and low temperature

Cinthia Piamonteze; Uwe Flechsig; Stefano Rusponi; Jan Dreiser; Jakoba Heidler; Marcus Schmidt; Reto Wetter; Marco Calvi; Thomas J. Schmidt; Helena Pruchova; Juraj Krempasky; Christoph Quitmann; Harald Brune; Frithjof Nolting

X-Treme is a soft X-ray beamline recently built in the Swiss Light Source at the Paul Scherrer Institut in collaboration with École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The beamline is dedicated to polarization-dependent X-ray absorption spectroscopy at high magnetic fields and low temperature. The source is an elliptically polarizing undulator. The end-station has a superconducting 7 T-2 T vector magnet, with sample temperature down to 2 K and is equipped with an in situ sample preparation system for surface science. The beamline commissioning measurements, which show a resolving power of 8000 and a maximum flux at the sample of 4.7 × 10(12) photons s(-1), are presented. Scientific examples showing X-ray magnetic circular and X-ray magnetic linear dichroism measurements are also presented.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

A new endstation at the Swiss Light Source for ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements of liquid solutions.

Matthew A. Brown; Amaia Beloqui Redondo; Inga Jordan; Nicolas Duyckaerts; Ming-Tao Lee; Markus Ammann; Frithjof Nolting; Armin Kleibert; Thomas Huthwelker; Jean-Pierre Mächler; Mario Birrer; Juri Honegger; Reto Wetter; Hans Jakob Wörner; Jeroen A. van Bokhoven

A new liquid microjet endstation designed for ultraviolet (UPS) and X-ray (XPS) photoelectron, and partial electron yield X-ray absorption (XAS) spectroscopies at the Swiss Light Source is presented. The new endstation, which is based on a Scienta HiPP-2 R4000 electron spectrometer, is the first liquid microjet endstation capable of operating in vacuum and in ambient pressures up to the equilibrium vapor pressure of liquid water at room temperature. In addition, the Scienta HiPP-2 R4000 energy analyzer of this new endstation allows for XPS measurements up to 7000 eV electron kinetic energy that will enable electronic structure measurements of bulk solutions and buried interfaces from liquid microjet samples. The endstation is designed to operate at the soft X-ray SIM beamline and at the tender X-ray Phoenix beamline. The endstation can also be operated using a Scienta 5 K ultraviolet helium lamp for dedicated UPS measurements at the vapor-liquid interface using either He I or He II α lines. The design concept, first results from UPS, soft X-ray XPS, and partial electron yield XAS measurements, and an outlook to the potential of this endstation are presented.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Spin configurations in Co2FeAl0.4Si0.6 Heusler alloy thin film elements

C. A. F. Vaz; Jan Rhensius; Jakoba Heidler; Phillip Wohlhüter; André Bisig; Helmut S. Körner; Tevfik Onur Menteş; A. Locatelli; Loic Le Guyader; Frithjof Nolting; Tanja Graf; Claudia Felser; L. J. Heyderman; Mathias Kläui

We determine experimentally the spin structure of half-metallic Co2FeAl0.4Si0.6 Heusler alloy elements using magnetic microscopy. Following magnetic saturation, the dominant magnetic states consist of quasi-uniform configurations, where a strong influence from the magnetocrystalline anisotropy is visible. Heating experiments show the stability of the spin configuration of domain walls in confined geometries up to 800 K. The switching temperature for the transition from transverse to vortex walls in ring elements is found to increase with ring width, an effect attributed to structural changes and consequent changes in magnetic anisotropy, which start to occur in the narrower elements at lower temperatures.


Chemical Science | 2012

On-surface coordination chemistry of planar molecular spin systems: novel magnetochemical effects induced by axial ligands

Christian Wäckerlin; Kartick Tarafder; Dorota Siewert; Jan Girovsky; Tatjana Hählen; Cristian Iacovita; Armin Kleibert; Frithjof Nolting; Thomas A. Jung; Peter M. Oppeneer; Nirmalya Ballav

Paramagnetic transition-metal complexes assembled on surfaces are of great interest for potential applications in organic spintronics. The magnetochemical interactions of the spin of the metal centers with both ferromagnetic surfaces and optional axial ligands are yet to be understood. We use a combination of X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) and quantum-chemical simulations based on density functional theory (DFT + U) to investigate these metal–organic interfaces with chemically tunable magnetization. The interplay between an optional axial ligand (NO, spin S = 1/2 or NH3, S = 0) and Ni and Co ferromagnetic surfaces affecting the spin of Co(II) tetraphenylporphyrin (d7, S = 1/2), Fe(II) tetraphenylporphyrin (d6, S = 1), Mn(II) tetraphenylporphyrin (d5, S = 5/2) and Mn(II) phthalocyanine (d5, S = 3/2) is studied. We find that the structural trans effect on the surface rules the molecular spin state, as well as the sign and strength of the exchange interaction with the substrate. We refer to this observation as the surface spin-trans effect.


Langmuir | 2013

Effect of Surface Charge Density on the Affinity of Oxide Nanoparticles for the Vapor–Water Interface

Matthew A. Brown; Nicolas Duyckaerts; Amaia Beloqui Redondo; Inga Jordan; Frithjof Nolting; Armin Kleibert; Markus Ammann; Hans Jakob Wörner; Jeroen A. van Bokhoven; Zareen Abbas

Using in-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy at the vapor-water interface, the affinity of nanometer-sized silica colloids to adsorb at the interface is shown to depend on colloid surface charge density. In aqueous suspensions at pH 10 corrected Debye-Hückel theory for surface complexation calculations predict that smaller silica colloids have increased negative surface charge density that originates from enhanced screening of deprotonated silanol groups (≡Si-O(-)) by counterions in the condensed ion layer. The increased negative surface charge density results in an electrostatic repulsion from the vapor-water interface that is seen to a lesser extent for larger particles that have a reduced charge density in the XPS measurements. We compare the results and interpretation of the in-situ XPS and corrected Debye-Hückel theory for surface complexation calculations with traditional surface tension measurements. Our results show that controlling the surface charge density of colloid particles can regulate their adsorption to the interface between two dielectrics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Thermalized ground state of artificial kagome spin ice building blocks

Unnar B. Arnalds; Alan Farhan; Rajesh V. Chopdekar; Vassilios Kapaklis; Ana Balan; Evangelos Th. Papaioannou; Martina Ahlberg; Frithjof Nolting; L. J. Heyderman; Björgvin Hjörvarsson

We present a direct magnetic imaging study on the thermal macrospin ordering of artificial kagome spin ice building blocks. Using photoemission electron microscopy, employing x-ray magnetic circular dichroism, we are able to resolve the single domain magnetic nature of the macrospins and determine the states of the combined building block structures. The nano-patterning and material selection allows thermally activated magnetization reversal for the macrospins to occur. The ordering of the macrospins is dominated by the ground state, consistent with a thermal ground state ordering. This work paves the way for the realization of extended artificial spin ice structures exhibiting experimentally accessible thermal behavior.

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Jan Dreiser

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Lutz Heyne

University of Konstanz

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Cinthia Piamonteze

State University of Campinas

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Harald Brune

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Stefano Rusponi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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