Nina-Juliane Steinke
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Nina-Juliane Steinke.
EPL | 2014
L. J. Collins-McIntyre; S. E. Harrison; Piet Schönherr; Nina-Juliane Steinke; C. J. Kinane; Timothy R. Charlton; D. Alba-Veneroa; Aakash Pushp; A. J. Kellock; S. S. P. Parkin; James S. Harris; S. Langridge; G. van der Laan; T. Hesjedal
We report the structural and magnetic study of Cr-doped Bi2Se3 thin films using x-ray diffraction (XRD), magnetometry and polarized neutron reflectometry (PNR). Epitaxial layers were grown on c-plane sapphire by molecular beam epitaxy in a two-step process. High-resolution XRD shows the exceptionally high crystalline quality of the doped films with no parasitic phases up to a Cr concentration of 12% (in % of the Bi sites occupied by substitutional Cr). The magnetic moment, measured by SQUID magnetometry, was found to be per Cr ion. The magnetic hysteresis curve shows an open loop with a coercive field of . The ferromagnetic transition temperature was determined to be analyzing the magnetization-temperature gradient. PNR shows the film to be homogeneously ferromagnetic with no enhanced magnetism near the surface or interface.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2017
Junyoung Kim; Adrian M. Ionescu; Rhodri Mansell; I. Farrer; Fabrice Oehler; C. J. Kinane; J. Cooper; Nina-Juliane Steinke; S. Langridge; Romuald Stankiewicz; Colin J. Humphreys; Russell P. Cowburn; S. N. Holmes; C. H. W. Barnes
Structural and magnetic properties of 1–10 nm thick Fe films deposited on GaN(0001) were investigated. In-situ reflecting high energy electron diffraction images indicated a α-Fe(110)/GaN(0001) growth of the 3D Volmer-Weber type. The α-Fe(110) X-ray diffraction peak showed a 1° full-width at half-maximum, indicating ≈20 nm grain sizes. A significant reduction in Fe atomic moment from its bulk value was observed for films thinner than 4 nm. Both GaN/Fe interface roughness and Fe film coercivity increased with Fe thickness, indicating a possible deterioration of Fe crystalline quality. Magnetic anisotropy was mainly uniaxial for all films while hexagonal anisotropies appeared for thicknesses higher than 3.7 nm.
EPL | 2016
L. J. Collins-McIntyre; L. B. Duffy; A. Singh; Nina-Juliane Steinke; C. J. Kinane; Timothy R. Charlton; Aakash Pushp; A. J. Kellock; S. S. P. Parkin; S. N. Holmes; C. H. W. Barnes; G. van der Laan; S. Langridge; T. Hesjedal
We report the structural, electronic, and magnetic study of Cr-doped Sb2Te3 thin films grown by a two-step deposition process using molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE). The samples were investigated using a variety of complementary techniques, namely, x-ray diffraction (XRD), atomic force microscopy, SQUID magnetometry, magneto-transport, and polarized neutron reflectometry (PNR). It is found that the samples retain good crystalline order up to a doping level of (in Cr x Sb2−x Te3), above which degradation of the crystal structure is observed by XRD. Fits to the recorded XRD spectra indicate a general reduction in the c-axis lattice parameter as a function of doping, consistent with substitutional doping with an ion of smaller ionic radius. The samples show soft ferromagnetic behavior with the easy axis of magnetization being out-of-plane. The saturation magnetization is dependent on the doping level, and reaches from to almost per Cr ion. The transition temperature depends strongly on the Cr concentration and is found to increase with doping concentration. For the highest achievable doping level for phase-pure films of , a of 125 K was determined. Electric transport measurements find surface-dominated transport below ~10 K. The magnetic properties extracted from anomalous Hall effect data are in excellent agreement with the magnetometry data. PNR studies indicate a uniform magnetization profile throughout the film, with no indication of enhanced magnetic order towards the sample surface.
AIP Advances | 2016
S. L. Zhang; R. Chalasani; A. A. Baker; Nina-Juliane Steinke; A. I. Figueroa; A. Kohn; G. van der Laan; T. Hesjedal
Magnetic skyrmion materials have the great advantage of a robust topological magnetic structure, which makes them stable against the superparamagnetic effect and therefore a candidate for the next-generation of spintronic memory devices. Bulk MnSi, with an ordering temperature of 29.5 K, is a typical skyrmion system with a propagation vector periodicity of ∼18 nm. One crucial prerequisite for any kind of application, however, is the observation and precise control of skyrmions in thin films at room-temperature. Strain in epitaxial MnSi thin films is known to raise the transition temperature to 43 K. Here we show, using magnetometry and x-ray spectroscopy, that the transition temperature can be raised further through proximity coupling to a ferromagnetic layer. Similarly, the external field required to stabilize the helimagnetic phase is lowered. Transmission electron microscopy with element-sensitive detection is used to explore the structural origin of ferromagnetism in these Mn-doped substrates. Our wor...
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2018
S.R. Parnell; Robert M. Dalgliesh; Nina-Juliane Steinke; J. Plomp; A.A. van Well
RF coils have been routinely used for Larmor labelling on the Offspec instrument at ISIS. These coils encode directional information via the neutron polarization using a series of parallelogram-shaped pole shoes which can be tuned to different angles with an RF gradient flipper in the centre of each magnet. We report on measurements of the magnetic field integral through the coils in reflection geometry for a range of scattering angles and different pole shoe angles. Such information is mapped out by measuring the phase of the neutron polarisation and the measurements are discussed in light of data on patterned silicon gratings with a dewetted polymer and the visibility of in-plane structures to SERGIS.
Nature Communications | 2017
C. Boelsma; L. J. Bannenberg; M. J. van Setten; Nina-Juliane Steinke; A. A. van Well; Bernard Dam
Hydrogen detection is essential for its implementation as an energy vector. So far, palladium is considered to be the most effective hydrogen sensing material. Here we show that palladium-capped hafnium thin films show a highly reproducible change in optical transmission in response to a hydrogen exposure ranging over six orders of magnitude in pressure. The optical signal is hysteresis-free within this range, which includes a transition between two structural phases. A temperature change results in a uniform shift of the optical signal. This, to our knowledge unique, feature facilitates the sensor calibration and suggests a constant hydrogenation enthalpy. In addition, it suggests an anomalously steep increase of the entropy with the hydrogen/metal ratio that cannot be explained on the basis of a classical solid solution model. The optical behaviour as a function of its hydrogen content makes hafnium well-suited for use as a hydrogen detection material.
Physical Review B | 2012
Nina-Juliane Steinke; T. A. Moore; Rhodri Mansell; J. A. C. Bland; C. H. W. Barnes
Physical Review A | 2014
V.O. de Haan; J. Plomp; A.A. van Well; M.T. Rekveldt; Yuji Hasegawa; Robert M. Dalgliesh; Nina-Juliane Steinke
Physical Review B | 2017
L. B. Duffy; A. I. Figueroa; Ł. Gładczuk; Nina-Juliane Steinke; Kurt Kummer; G. van der Laan; T. Hesjedal
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016
L. J. Bannenberg; H. Schreuders; Lambert van Eijck; Jouke R. Heringa; Nina-Juliane Steinke; Robert M. Dalgliesh; Bernard Dam; Fokko M. Mulder; Ad A. van Well