Mohammed Bouhassoune
Forschungszentrum Jülich
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Featured researches published by Mohammed Bouhassoune.
Nature Communications | 2016
Alexander Ako Khajetoorians; M. Steinbrecher; Markus Ternes; Mohammed Bouhassoune; M. dos Santos Dias; Samir Lounis; Jens Wiebe; R. Wiesendanger
Chiral magnets are a promising route towards dense magnetic storage technology due to their inherent nano-scale dimensions and energy efficient properties. Engineering chiral magnets requires atomic-level control of the magnetic exchange interactions, including the Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya interaction, which defines a rotational sense for the magnetization of two coupled magnetic moments. Here we show that the indirect conduction electron-mediated Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya interaction between two individual magnetic atoms on a metallic surface can be manipulated by changing the interatomic distance with the tip of a scanning tunnelling microscope. We quantify this interaction by comparing our measurements to a quantum magnetic model and ab-initio calculations yielding a map of the chiral ground states of pairs of atoms depending on the interatomic separation. The map enables tailoring the chirality of the magnetization in dilute atomic-scale magnets.
Nature Communications | 2016
M. Steinbrecher; Andreas Sonntag; M. dos Santos Dias; Mohammed Bouhassoune; Samir Lounis; Jens Wiebe; R. Wiesendanger; Alexander Ako Khajetoorians
Whether rare-earth materials can be used as single-atom magnetic memory is an ongoing debate in recent literature. Here we show, by inelastic and spin-resolved scanning tunnelling-based methods, that we observe a strong magnetic signal and excitation from Fe atoms adsorbed on Pt(111), but see no signatures of magnetic excitation or spin-based telegraph noise for Ho atoms. Moreover, we observe that the indirect exchange field produced by a single Ho atom is negligible, as sensed by nearby Fe atoms. We demonstrate, using ab initio methods, that this stems from a comparatively weak coupling of the Ho 4f electrons with both tunnelling electrons and substrate-derived itinerant electrons, making both magnetic coupling and detection very difficult when compared to 3d elements. We discuss these results in the context of ongoing disputes and clarify important controversies.
Nature Communications | 2014
Henning Prüser; Piet E. Dargel; Mohammed Bouhassoune; R. G. Ulbrich; Thomas Pruschke; Samir Lounis; M. Wenderoth
The interplay between the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida interaction and the Kondo effect is expected to provide the driving force for the emergence of many phenomena in strongly correlated electron materials. Two magnetic impurities in a metal are the smallest possible system containing all these ingredients and define a bottom-up approach towards a long-term understanding of concentrated/dense systems. Here we report on the experimental and theoretical investigation of iron dimers buried below a Cu(100) surface by means of low-temperature scanning tunnelling spectroscopy combined with density functional theory and numerical renormalization group calculations. The Kondo effect, in particular the width of the Abrikosov-Suhl resonance, is strongly altered or even suppressed due to magnetic coupling between the impurities. It oscillates as a function of dimer separation revealing that it is related to indirect exchange interactions mediated by the conduction electrons.
Nature Communications | 2016
Manuel dos Santos Dias; Juba Bouaziz; Mohammed Bouhassoune; Stefan Blügel; Samir Lounis
When electrons are driven through unconventional magnetic structures, such as skyrmions, they experience emergent electromagnetic fields that originate several Hall effects. Independently, ground-state emergent magnetic fields can also lead to orbital magnetism, even without the spin–orbit interaction. The close parallel between the geometric theories of the Hall effects and of the orbital magnetization raises the question: does a skyrmion display topological orbital magnetism? Here we first address the smallest systems with nonvanishing emergent magnetic field, trimers, characterizing the orbital magnetic properties from first-principles. Armed with this understanding, we study the orbital magnetism of skyrmions and demonstrate that the contribution driven by the emergent magnetic field is topological. This means that the topological contribution to the orbital moment does not change under continuous deformations of the magnetic structure. Furthermore, we use it to propose a new experimental protocol for the identification of topological magnetic structures, by soft X-ray spectroscopy.
Nature Communications | 2014
Mohammed Bouhassoune; Bernd Zimmermann; Phivos Mavropoulos; Daniel Wortmann; Peter H. Dederichs; Stefan Blügel; Samir Lounis
Electrons mediate many of the interactions between atoms in a solid. Their propagation in a material determines its thermal, electrical, optical, magnetic and transport properties. Therefore, the constant energy contours characterizing the electrons, in particular the Fermi surface, have a prime impact on the behaviour of materials. If anisotropic, the contours induce strong directional dependence at the nanoscale in the Friedel oscillations surrounding impurities. Here we report on giant anisotropic charge density oscillations focused along specific directions with strong spin-filtering after scattering at an oxygen impurity embedded in the surface of a ferromagnetic thin film of Fe grown on W(001). Utilizing density functional theory, we demonstrate that by changing the thickness of the Fe films, we control quantum well states confined to two dimensions that manifest as multiple flat energy contours, impinging and tuning the strength of the induced charge oscillations which allow to detect the oxygen impurity at large distances (≈50 nm).
Nature Communications | 2015
Henning Prüser; Piet E. Dargel; Mohammed Bouhassoune; R. G. Ulbrich; Thomas Pruschke; Samir Lounis; M. Wenderoth
Nature Communications 5: Article number:5417 (2014); Published 11 November 2014; Updated 13 February 2015. This Article contains typographical errors in equation (1), in which a number of mathematical operators were inadvertently removed during the production process. The correct version of equation(1) appears below.
Surface Science | 2014
Samir Lounis; Benedikt Schweflinghaus; Manuel dos Santos Dias; Mohammed Bouhassoune; R. B. Muniz; A. T. Costa
Frühjahrstagung der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft | 2018
Imara Lima Fernandes; Mohammed Bouhassoune; Samir Lounis; Stefan Blügel
EU-JAPAN Workshop on Computational Materials Design and Realization for Spintronics, Moltronics, Quantronics, Superconductivity and Topotronics | 2016
Manuel dos Santos Dias; Juba Bouaziz; Samir Lounis; Mohammed Bouhassoune; Stefan Blügel
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Dax M. Crum; Mohammed Bouhassoune; Juba Bouaziz; Benedikt Schweflinghaus; Stefan Bl{ "u}gel; Samir Lounis