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Featured researches published by Stefan Mattauch.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Microscopic origin of training in exchange bias system

Amitesh Paul; Stefan Mattauch

The microscopic origin of training in exchange coupled systems has been identified from our experimentally observed microscopic suppression of training. It is an interplay of uniaxial anisotropy and uncompensated spins in the antiferromagnet grains that are rotatable in polycrystalline antiferromagnetic layer similar to spin-glass-like behavior.


Physical Review E | 2015

Influence of ibuprofen on phospholipid membranes

Sebastian Jaksch; Frederik Lipfert; Alexandros Koutsioubas; Stefan Mattauch; Olaf Holderer; Oxana Ivanova; Henrich Frielinghaus; Samira Hertrich; Stefan Fischer; Bert Nickel

A basic understanding of biological membranes is of paramount importance as these membranes comprise the very building blocks of life itself. Cells depend in their function on a range of properties of the membrane, which are important for the stability and function of the cell, information and nutrient transport, waste disposal, and finally the admission of drugs into the cell and also the deflection of bacteria and viruses. We have investigated the influence of ibuprofen on the structure and dynamics of L-α-phosphatidylcholine (SoyPC) membranes by means of grazing incidence small-angle neutron scattering, neutron reflectometry, and grazing incidence neutron spin echo spectroscopy. From the results of these experiments, we were able to determine that ibuprofen induces a two-step structuring behavior in the SoyPC films, where the structure evolves from the purely lamellar phase for pure SoyPC over a superposition of two hexagonal phases to a purely hexagonal phase at high concentrations. A relaxation, which is visible when no ibuprofen is present in the membrane, vanishes upon addition of ibuprofen. This we attribute to a stiffening of the membrane. This behavior may be instrumental in explaining the toxic behavior of ibuprofen in long-term application.


Acta Crystallographica Section B-structural Science | 2006

Structural phase transition and hydrogen ordering of TlH2PO4 at low temperature.

Oh Ih; Michael Merz; Stefan Mattauch; G. Heger

The crystal structure of TlH(2)PO(4) (TDP) has been studied at low temperature. The lattice parameters were derived from high-resolution X-ray powder diffraction in the temperature range between 8 and 300 K. A detailed crystal structure analysis of the antiferroelectric low-temperature phase TDP-III has been performed based on neutron diffraction data measured at 210 K on a twinned crystal consisting of two domain states. The structure model in the triclinic space group P\bar 1 is characterized by a complete ordering of all the H atoms in the asymmetric O-H...O hydrogen bonds. The phase transition from the ferroelastic TDP-II to the antiferroelectric TDP-III phase at 229.5 +/- 0.5 K is only slightly of first order and shows no detectable hysteresis effects. Its mechanism is driven by the hydrogen ordering between the partially ordered TDP-II state and the completely ordered TDP-III state. The polymorphism of TDP and the fully deuterated TlD(2)PO(4) (DTDP) is presented in the form of group-subgroup relations between the different space groups.


Science | 2017

All-oxide–based synthetic antiferromagnets exhibiting layer-resolved magnetization reversal

Binbin Chen; Haoran Xu; Chao Ma; Stefan Mattauch; Da Lan; Feng Jin; Zhuang Guo; Siyuan Wan; Pingfan Chen; Guanyin Gao; Feng Chen; Yixi Su; Wenbin Wu

Making an oxide-layered antiferromagnet Antiferromagnetism, a state of matter where ordered neighboring spins point in opposite directions, can be engineered in layered heterostructures, which affords control over their properties. Doing so in oxide heterostructures is tricky because the necessary ferromagnetism of the constituent layers may not survive thinning to nanometer thicknesses. Chen et al. overcame this materials challenge by finding and growing the right combination of substrate, magnetic, and insulating layers to engineer antiferromagnetic coupling. The resulting superlattices, consisting of alternating layers of a ferromagnetic oxide and an insulating material, exhibit layer-by-layer switching of magnetization. Science, this issue p. 191 Superlattices made of layers of ferromagnetic La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 and insulating CaRu1/2Ti1/2O3 show antiferromagnetic coupling. Synthesizing antiferromagnets with correlated oxides has been challenging, owing partly to the markedly degraded ferromagnetism of the magnetic layer at nanoscale thicknesses. Here we report on the engineering of an antiferromagnetic interlayer exchange coupling (AF-IEC) between ultrathin but ferromagnetic La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 layers across an insulating CaRu1/2Ti1/2O3 spacer. The layer-resolved magnetic switching leads to sharp steplike hysteresis loops with magnetization plateaus depending on the repetition number of the stacking bilayers. The magnetization configurations can be switched at moderate fields of hundreds of oersted. Moreover, the AF-IEC can also be realized with an alternative magnetic layer of La2/3Sr1/3MnO3 that possesses a Curie temperature near room temperature. The findings will add functionalities to devices with correlated-oxide interfaces.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2011

High level of 3He polarization maintained in an on-beam 3He spin filter using SEOP

Earl Babcock; Stefan Mattauch; Alexander Ioffe

Abstract Maintaining high levels of 3 He polarization over long periods of time is important for many areas of fundamental and particle beam physics. Long measurement times are often required in such experiments, and the data quality is a function of the 3 He polarization. This is the case for neutron scattering, where the 3 He can be used to analyze the spin of a scattered neutron beam. For neutron scattering, the relatively small fluxes of polarized neutrons lead to experiment times longer than several days. Consequently, the Julich Centre for Neutron Science (JCNS) is developing spin-exchange optical pumping (SEOP) systems capable of polarizing the 3 He gas in place on a typical neutron instrument. With the polarizer we have constructed, a very high level of 3 He polarization of 80.4%±1.5% was obtained and maintained with good time stability. Having such high levels of polarization that are stable over time will reduce the measurement times for such experiments and eliminate time-dependent data corrections.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Self-Diffusion in Amorphous Silicon.

Florian Strauß; Lars Dörrer; Thomas Geue; Jochen Stahn; Alexandros Koutsioubas; Stefan Mattauch; Harald Schmidt

The present Letter reports on self-diffusion in amorphous silicon. Experiments were done on ^{29}Si/^{nat}Si heterostructures using neutron reflectometry and secondary ion mass spectrometry. The diffusivities follow the Arrhenius law in the temperature range between 550 and 700 °C with an activation energy of (4.4±0.3)  eV. In comparison with single crystalline silicon the diffusivities are tremendously higher by 5 orders of magnitude at about 700 °C, which can be interpreted as the consequence of a high diffusion entropy.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2010

Can uniaxial anisotropy be responsible for training in exchange coupled system

Amitesh Paul; Stefan Mattauch

Training in exchange bias can be related to the field cooled state of the ferromagnet—multidomain or single domain. In a system of coexistent states, realized by coercive field cooling, we could observe usual training for the single domain portion while the multidomain portion remains untrained. This crossover state indicates to the fact that antiferromagnetic uniaxial anisotropy can be made responsible for the training in exchange coupled system where no biaxial anisotropy could exist.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2018

The high-intensity reflectometer of the Jülich Centre for Neutron Science: MARIA

Stefan Mattauch; Alexandros Koutsioubas; Ulrich Rücker; Denis Korolkov; Vicenzo Fracassi; Jos Daemen; Ralf Schmitz; Klaus Bussmann; Frank Suxdorf; Michael Wagener; Peter Kämmerling; Harald Kleines; Lydia Fleischhauer-Fuß; Manfred Bednareck; Vladimir Ossoviy; Andreas Nebel; Peter Stronciwilk; Simon Staringer; Marko Gödel; Alfred Richter; Harald Kusche; Thomas Kohnke; Alexander Ioffe; Earl Babcock; Zahir Salhi; Thomas Brückel

MARIA is a world class vertical sample reflectometer dedicated to the investigation of thin films in the fields of magnetism, soft matter and biology. With the elliptical vertically focusing guide and a wavelength resolution of Δλ/λ = 10%, the non-polarized flux at the sample position amounts to 1.2 × 108 n (s cm2)−1. Besides the polarized and non-polarized reflectivity mode for specular and off-specular reflectivity measurements, MARIA can also be used to carry out grazing-incidence small-angle neutron scattering investigations.


Small | 2017

Lateral Magnetically Modulated Multilayers by Combining Ion Implantation and Lithography

Enric Menéndez; Hiwa Modarresi; Claire Petermann; J. Nogués; Neus Domingo; Haoliang Liu; Brian J. Kirby; Amir Syed Mohd; Zahir Salhi; Earl Babcock; Stefan Mattauch; Chris Van Haesendonck; André Vantomme; Kristiaan Temst

The combination of lithography and ion implantation is demonstrated to be a suitable method to prepare lateral multilayers. A laterally, compositionally, and magnetically modulated microscale pattern consisting of alternating Co (1.6 µm wide) and Co-CoO (2.4 µm wide) lines has been obtained by oxygen ion implantation into a lithographically masked Au-sandwiched Co thin film. Magnetoresistance along the lines (i.e., current and applied magnetic field are parallel to the lines) reveals an effective positive giant magnetoresistance (GMR) behavior at room temperature. Conversely, anisotropic magnetoresistance and GMR contributions are distinguished at low temperature (i.e., 10 K) since the O-implanted areas become exchange coupled. This planar GMR is principally ascribed to the spatial modulation of coercivity in a spring-magnet-type configuration, which results in 180° Néel extrinsic domain walls at the Co/Co-CoO interfaces. The versatility, in terms of pattern size, morphology, and composition adjustment, of this method offers a unique route to fabricate planar systems for, among others, spintronic research and applications.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Magnetization reversal and domain correlation for a non-collinear and out-of-plane exchange-coupled system

Amitesh Paul; N Paul; Stefan Mattauch

We have investigated the impact of out-of-plane ferromagnetic (FM) anisotropy (which can be coincident with the direction of unidirectional anisotropy), where antiferromagnetic (AF) anisotropy is along the film plane. This provides a platform for non-collinear exchange coupling in an archetypal exchange coupled system in an unconventional way. We probe the in-plane magnetization by the depth-sensitive vector magnetometry technique. The experimental findings reveal a magnetization reversal (i) that is symmetric for both the branches of the hysteresis loop, (ii) that is characterized by vertically correlated domains associated with a strong transverse component of magnetization and (iii) that remains untrained (suppression of trained state) with field cycling. This scenario has been compared with in-plane magnetization reversal for a conventional in-plane unidirectional anisotropic case in the same system that shows usual asymmetric reversal and training for vertically uncorrelated domains. We explain the above observations for the out-of-plane case in terms of inhomogeneous magnetic states due to competing perpendicular anisotropies that result in non-collinear FM–AF coupling. This study provides direct evidence for the vertical correlation of domains mediated by out-of-plane exchange coupling.

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Thomas Brückel

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Olaf Holderer

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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G. Heger

RWTH Aachen University

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Ulrich Rücker

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Alexander Ioffe

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Amitesh Paul

Technische Universität München

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