Pin-Jui Hsu
University of Hamburg
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pin-Jui Hsu.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2016
Pin-Jui Hsu; A. Kubetzka; Aurore Finco; Niklas Romming; Kirsten Bergmann; R. Wiesendanger
Controlling magnetism with electric fields is a key challenge to develop future energy-efficient devices. The present magnetic information technology is mainly based on writing processes requiring either local magnetic fields or spin torques, but it has also been demonstrated that magnetic properties can be altered on the application of electric fields. This has been ascribed to changes in magnetocrystalline anisotropy caused by spin-dependent screening and modifications of the band structure, changes in atom positions or differences in hybridization with an adjacent oxide layer. However, the switching between states related by time reversal, for example magnetization up and down as used in the present technology, is not straightforward because the electric field does not break time-reversal symmetry. Several workarounds have been applied to toggle between bistable magnetic states with electric fields, including changes of material composition as a result of electric fields. Here we demonstrate that local electric fields can be used to switch reversibly between a magnetic skyrmion and the ferromagnetic state. These two states are topologically inequivalent, and we find that the direction of the electric field directly determines the final state. This observation establishes the possibility to combine electric-field writing with the recently envisaged skyrmion racetrack-type memories.
Nano Letters | 2014
Jens Kügel; M. Karolak; Jacob Senkpiel; Pin-Jui Hsu; G. Sangiovanni; M. Bode
Magnetic organic molecules, such as 3d transition metal phthalocyanines (TMPc), exhibit properties which make them promising candidates for future applications in magnetic data storage or spin-based data processing. Due to their small size, however, TMPc molecules are prone to quantum effects. For example, the interaction of uncompensated molecular spins with conduction electrons of the substrate may lead to the formation of a many-body singlet state, which gives rise to the so-called Kondo effect. Although the Kondo effect of TMPc molecules has been the object of several investigations, a consistent picture to describe under which conditions a Kondo state is formed is still missing. Here, we study the Kondo properties of MnPc on Ag(001) by means of the low-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy (LT-STS) measurements. Differential conductance dI/dU spectra reveal a zero-bias peak that is localized on the Mn ion site. Ab initio calculations combined with a many-body treatment of the multiorbital interaction show that the local Hund coupling favors the high-spin configuration on the 3d shell of the central TM atom. Therefore, each orbital gets close to its individual half-filling creating the necessary condition for many of the 3d orbitals to contribute to the observed Kondo resonance. This, however, happens only for the 3dz(2) orbital, whose hybridization to the substrate is much stronger than for the other orbitals thanks to its shape and its orientation.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Pin-Jui Hsu; Tobias Mauerer; Matthias Vogt; Junjie Yang; Yoon Seok Oh; Sang-Wook Cheong; M. Bode; Weida Wu
We report on the observation of the hysteretic transition of a commensurate charge modulation in IrTe2 from transport and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) studies. Below the transition (TC≈275 K on cooling), a q=1/5 charge modulation was observed, which is consistent with previous studies. Additional modulations [qn=(3n+2)(-1)] appear below a second transition at TS≈180 K on cooling. The coexistence of various modulations persists up to TC on warming. The atomic structures of charge modulations and the temperature-dependent STM studies suggest that 1/5 modulation is a periodic soliton lattice that partially melts below TS on cooling. Our results provide compelling evidence that the ground state of IrTe2 is a commensurate 1/6 charge modulation, which originates from the periodic dimerization of Te atoms visualized by atomically resolved STM images.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Pin-Jui Hsu; Aurore Finco; Lorenz Schmidt; A. Kubetzka; Kirsten von Bergmann; R. Wiesendanger
We report on the influence of uniaxial strain relief on the spin spiral state in the Fe double layer grown on Ir(111). Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) measurements reveal areas with reconstruction lines resulting from uniaxial strain relief due to the lattice mismatch of Fe and Ir atoms, as well as pseudomorphic strained areas. Magnetic field-dependent spin-polarized STM measurements of the reconstructed Fe double layer reveal cycloidal spin spirals with a period on the nm scale. Globally, the spin spiral wave fronts are guided along symmetry-equivalent [112̅] crystallographic directions of the fcc(111) substrate. On an atomic scale the spin spiral propagation direction is linked to the [001] direction of the bcc(110)-like Fe, leading to a zigzag shaped wave front. The isotropically strained pseudomorphic areas also exhibit a preferred magnetic periodicity on the nm scale but no long-range order. We find that already for local strain relief with a single set of reconstruction lines a strict guiding of the spin spiral is realized.
Nature Communications | 2016
Pin-Jui Hsu; Jens Kügel; Jeannette Kemmer; Francesco Parisen Toldin; Tobias Mauerer; Matthias Vogt; Fakher F. Assaad; M. Bode
Phase coexistence phenomena have been intensively studied in strongly correlated materials where several ordered states simultaneously occur or compete. Material properties critically depend on external parameters and boundary conditions, where tiny changes result in qualitatively different ground states. However, up to date, phase coexistence phenomena have exclusively been reported for complex compounds composed of multiple elements. Here we show that charge- and magnetically ordered states coexist in double-layer Fe/Rh(001). Scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy measurements reveal periodic charge-order stripes below a temperature of 130 K. Close to liquid helium temperature, they are superimposed by ferromagnetic domains as observed by spin-polarized scanning tunnelling microscopy. Temperature-dependent measurements reveal a pronounced cross-talk between charge and spin order at the ferromagnetic ordering temperature about 70 K, which is successfully modelled within an effective Ginzburg–Landau ansatz including sixth-order terms. Our results show that subtle balance between structural modifications can lead to competing ordering phenomena.
Nature Communications | 2018
Pin-Jui Hsu; Levente Rózsa; Aurore Finco; Lorenz Schmidt; Krisztián Palotás; E. Y. Vedmedenko; László Udvardi; L. Szunyogh; A. Kubetzka; Kirsten von Bergmann; R. Wiesendanger
Magnetic skyrmions are localized nanometer-sized spin configurations with particle-like properties, which are envisioned to be used as bits in next-generation information technology. An essential step toward future skyrmion-based applications is to engineer key magnetic parameters for developing and stabilizing individual magnetic skyrmions. Here we demonstrate the tuning of the non-collinear magnetic state of an Fe double layer on an Ir(111) substrate by loading the sample with atomic hydrogen. By using spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy, we discover that the hydrogenated system supports the formation of skyrmions in external magnetic fields, while the pristine Fe double layer does not. Based on ab initio calculations, we attribute this effect to the tuning of the Heisenberg exchange and the Dzyaloshinsky–Moriya interactions due to hydrogenation. In addition to interface engineering, hydrogenation of thin magnetic films offers a unique pathway to design and optimize the skyrmionic states in low-dimensional magnetic materials.Stabilization of skyrmions is one of the key issues in skyrmion-based spintronics. Here the authors demonstrate that hydrogenation can induce the formation of skyrmions in iron thin films, which provides an alternative way to tailor skyrmion states in low-dimensional magnetic materials.
Physical Review B | 2016
Aurore Finco; Pin-Jui Hsu; A. Kubetzka; Kirsten von Bergmann; R. Wiesendanger
The large epitaxial stress induced by the misfit between a triple atomic layer Fe film and an Ir(111) substrate is relieved by the formation of a dense dislocation line network. Spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy investigations show that the strain is locally varying within the Fe film and that this variation affects the magnetic state of the system. Two types of dislocation line regions can be distinguished and both exhibit spin spirals with strain-dependent periods (ranging from 3 to
Physical Review B | 2015
Jens Kügel; M. Karolak; Andreas Krönlein; Jacob Senkpiel; Pin-Jui Hsu; G. Sangiovanni; M. Bode
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Physical Review Letters | 2017
Aurore Finco; Levente Rózsa; Pin-Jui Hsu; A. Kubetzka; E. Y. Vedmedenko; Kirsten Bergmann; R. Wiesendanger
. Using a simple micromagnetic model, we attribute the changes of the period of the spin spirals to variations of the effective exchange coupling in the magnetic film. This assumption is supported by the observed dependence of the saturation magnetic field on the period of the zero-field spin spiral. Moreover, magnetic skyrmions appear in an external magnetic field only in one type of dislocation line area, which we impute to the different pinning properties of the dislocation lines.
Physical Review B | 2016
Tobias Mauerer; Matthias Vogt; Pin-Jui Hsu; Gheorghe L. Pascut; Kristjan Haule; V. Kiryukhin; Junjie Yang; Sang-Wook Cheong; Weida Wu; M. Bode