S. Macke
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by S. Macke.
Nature Materials | 2011
E. Benckiser; M. W. Haverkort; Sebastian Brück; E. Goering; S. Macke; A. Frano; Xiaoping Yang; O. K. Andersen; G. Cristiani; H.-U. Habermeier; A. V. Boris; Ioannis Zegkinoglou; P. Wochner; Heon-Jung Kim; V. Hinkov; B. Keimer
The occupation of d orbitals controls the magnitude and anisotropy of the inter-atomic electron transfer in transition-metal oxides and hence exerts a key influence on their chemical bonding and physical properties. Atomic-scale modulations of the orbital occupation at surfaces and interfaces are believed to be responsible for massive variations of the magnetic and transport properties, but could not thus far be probed in a quantitative manner. Here we show that it is possible to derive quantitative, spatially resolved orbital polarization profiles from soft-X-ray reflectivity data, without resorting to model calculations. We demonstrate that the method is sensitive enough to resolve differences of ~3% in the occupation of Ni e(g) orbitals in adjacent atomic layers of a LaNiO(3)-LaAlO(3) superlattice, in good agreement with ab initio electronic-structure calculations. The possibility to quantitatively correlate theory and experiment on the atomic scale opens up many new perspectives for orbital physics in transition-metal oxides.
Nature Materials | 2016
Zhaoliang Liao; Mark Huijben; Zhicheng Zhong; Nicolas Gauquelin; S. Macke; R. J. Green; S. Van Aert; Jo Verbeeck; G. Van Tendeloo; K. Held; G. A. Sawatzky; Gertjan Koster; Guus Rijnders
Controlled in-plane rotation of the magnetic easy axis in manganite heterostructures by tailoring the interface oxygen network could allow the development of correlated oxide-based magnetic tunnelling junctions with non-collinear magnetization, with possible practical applications as miniaturized high-switching-speed magnetic random access memory (MRAM) devices. Here, we demonstrate how to manipulate magnetic and electronic anisotropic properties in manganite heterostructures by engineering the oxygen network on the unit-cell level. The strong oxygen octahedral coupling is found to transfer the octahedral rotation, present in the NdGaO3 (NGO) substrate, to the La2/3Sr1/3MnO3 (LSMO) film in the interface region. This causes an unexpected realignment of the magnetic easy axis along the short axis of the LSMO unit cell as well as the presence of a giant anisotropic transport in these ultrathin LSMO films. As a result we possess control of the lateral magnetic and electronic anisotropies by atomic-scale design of the oxygen octahedral rotation.
Nature Materials | 2015
Yunzhong Chen; Felix Trier; T. Wijnands; R. J. Green; Nicolas Gauquelin; Ricardo Egoavil; Dennis Valbjørn Christensen; Gertjan Koster; Mark Huijben; N. Bovet; S. Macke; F. He; Ronny Sutarto; Niels Hessel Andersen; J. A. Sulpizio; M. Honig; Guenevere E. D. K. Prawiroatmodjo; Thomas Jespersen; Søren Linderoth; S. Ilani; Jo Verbeeck; G. Van Tendeloo; Guus Rijnders; G. A. Sawatzky; Nini Pryds
Two-dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) formed at the interface of insulating complex oxides promise the development of all-oxide electronic devices. These 2DEGs involve many-body interactions that give rise to a variety of physical phenomena such as superconductivity, magnetism, tunable metal-insulator transitions and phase separation. Increasing the mobility of the 2DEG, however, remains a major challenge. Here, we show that the electron mobility is enhanced by more than two orders of magnitude by inserting a single-unit-cell insulating layer of polar La(1-x)Sr(x)MnO3 (x = 0, 1/8, and 1/3) at the interface between disordered LaAlO3 and crystalline SrTiO3 produced at room temperature. Resonant X-ray spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy show that the manganite layer undergoes unambiguous electronic reconstruction, leading to modulation doping of such atomically engineered complex oxide heterointerfaces. At low temperatures, the modulation-doped 2DEG exhibits Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations and fingerprints of the quantum Hall effect, demonstrating unprecedented high mobility and low electron density.
Nano Letters | 2012
Woo Seok Choi; Ji-Hwan Kwon; Hyoungjeen Jeen; Jorge E. Hamann-Borrero; Abdullah Radi; S. Macke; Ronny Sutarto; F. He; G. A. Sawatzky; V. Hinkov; Miyoung Kim; Ho Nyung Lee
Epitaxial strain imposed in complex oxide thin films by heteroepitaxy is recognized as a powerful tool for identifying new properties and exploring the vast potential of materials performance. A particular example is LaCoO(3), a zero spin, nonmagnetic material in the bulk, whose strong ferromagnetism in a thin film remains enigmatic despite a decade of intense research. Here, we use scanning transmission electron microscopy complemented by X-ray and optical spectroscopy to study LaCoO(3) epitaxial thin films under different strain states. We observed an unconventional strain relaxation behavior resulting in stripe-like, lattice modulated patterns, which did not involve uncontrolled misfit dislocations or other defects. The modulation entails the formation of ferromagnetically ordered sheets comprising intermediate or high spin Co(3+), thus offering an unambiguous description for the exotic magnetism found in epitaxially strained LaCoO(3) films. This observation provides a novel route to tailoring the electronic and magnetic properties of functional oxide heterostructures.
Physical Review B | 2013
M. Wu; E. Benckiser; M. W. Haverkort; A. Franco; Junling Lu; U. Nwankwo; Sebastian Brück; Patrick Audehm; E. Goering; S. Macke; V. Hinkov; P. Wochner; G. Christiani; S. Heinze; G. Logvenov; H.-U. Habermeier; B. Keimer
A combined analysis of x-ray absorption and resonant reflectivity data was used to obtain the orbital polarization profiles of superlattices composed of four-unit-cell-thick layers of metallic LaNiO3 and layers of insulating RXO3 (R=La, Gd, Dy and X=Al, Ga, Sc), grown on substrates that impose either compressive or tensile strain. This superlattice geometry allowed us to partly separate the influence of epitaxial strain from interfacial effects controlled by the chemical composition of the insulating blocking layers. Our quantitative analysis reveal orbital polarizations up to 25%. We further show that strain is the most effective control parameter, whereas the influence of the chemical composition of the blocking layers is comparatively small.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
D. K. Satapathy; M. A. Uribe-Laverde; I. Marozau; V. K. Malik; S. Das; Thomas Wagner; C. Marcelot; J. Stahn; Sebastian Brück; A. Rühm; S. Macke; T. Tietze; E. Goering; A. Frano; J. H. Kim; M. Wu; E. Benckiser; B. Keimer; A. Devishvili; B. P. Toperverg; M. Merz; P. Nagel; S. Schuppler; C. Bernhard
Using neutron reflectometry and resonant x-ray techniques we studied the magnetic proximity effect (MPE) in superlattices composed of superconducting YBa2Cu3O7 and ferromagnetic-metallic La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 or ferromagnetic-insulating LaMnO(3+δ). We find that the MPE strongly depends on the electronic state of the manganite layers, being pronounced for the ferromagnetic-metallic La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 and almost absent for ferromagnetic-insulating LaMnO(3+δ). We also detail the change of the magnetic depth profile due to the MPE and provide evidence for its intrinsic nature.
Advanced Materials | 2014
S. Macke; Abdullah Radi; Jorge E. Hamann-Borrero; Adriano Verna; M. Bluschke; Sebastian Brück; E. Goering; Ronny Sutarto; F. He; G. Cristiani; M. Wu; E. Benckiser; H.-U. Habermeier; G. Logvenov; Nicolas Gauquelin; Adam P. Kajdos; Susanne Stemmer; G. A. Sawatzky; M. W. Haverkort; B. Keimer; V. Hinkov
The electronic phase behavior and functionality of interfaces and surfaces in complex materials are strongly correlated to chemical composition profiles, stoichiometry and intermixing. Here a novel analysis scheme for resonant X-ray reflectivity maps is introduced to determine such profiles, which is element specific and non-destructive, and which exhibits atomic-layer resolution and a probing depth of hundreds of nanometers.
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 2008
D. Goll; Achim Breitling; S. Macke
Exchange-coupled L10 -FePt/Fe composite systems with out-of-plane anisotropy are produced to study the influence of the soft magnetic layer thickness and of the character of the interface between hard magnetic L10-FePt and soft magnetic Fe on the magnetic properties. By the soft magnetic layer thickness d Fe the coercivity can be tailored according to a 1/d Fe 2 relation. By depositing part of the Fe layer at elevated temperatures a graded interface between the L10-FePt layer and the Fe layer is formed which allows an additional fine tuning of the coercivity. This behavior is confirmed by micromagnetic numerical simulations. The simulations furthermore show that the reversal behavior and the thermal stability are nearly the same for out-of-plane and in-plane anisotropy of L10-FePt. If the remanent magnetization configuration shows deviations from the homogeneous magnetization distribution an alternative low-field thermal reversal mode occurs.
EPL | 2014
M. W. Haverkort; G. Sangiovanni; Philipp Hansmann; A. Toschi; Y. Lu; S. Macke
Using a recently developed impurity solver we exemplify how dynamical mean field theory captures band excitations, resonances, edge singularities and excitons in core level x-ray absorption (XAS) and core level photo electron spectroscopy (cPES) on metals, correlated metals and Mott insulators. Comparing XAS at different values of the core-valence interaction shows how the quasiparticle peak in the absence of core-valence interactions evolves into a resonance of similar shape, but different origin. Whereas XAS is rather insensitive to the metal insulator transition, cPES can be used, due to nonlocal screening, to measure the amount of local charge fluctuation.
Physical Review B | 2016
Y. Lu; A. Frano; M. Bluschke; M. Hepting; S. Macke; J. Strempfer; P. Wochner; G. Cristiani; G. Logvenov; H.-U. Habermeier; M. W. Haverkort; B. Keimer; E. Benckiser
We present a combined study of Ni