Stefano Rusponi
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Featured researches published by Stefano Rusponi.
Science | 2014
Ileana G. Rau; Susanne Baumann; Stefano Rusponi; Fabio Donati; Sebastian Stepanow; Luca Gragnaniello; Jan Dreiser; Cinthia Piamonteze; F. Nolting; Shruba Gangopadhyay; Oliver R. Albertini; R. M. Macfarlane; Christopher P. Lutz; B. A. Jones; Pietro Gambardella; Andreas J. Heinrich; Harald Brune
Maximizing atomic magnetic memory A study of the magnetic response of cobalt atoms adsorbed on oxide surfaces may lead to much denser storage of data. In hard drives, data are stored as magnetic bits; the magnetic field pointing up or down corresponds to storing a zero or a one. The smallest bit possible would be a single atom, but the magnetism of a single atom —its spin—has to be stabilized by interactions with heavy elements or surfaces through an effect called spin-orbit coupling. Rau et al. (see the Perspective by Khajetoorians and Wiebe) built a model system in pursuit of single-atom bits—cobalt atoms adsorbed on magnesium oxide. At temperatures approaching absolute zero, the stabilization of the spins magnetic direction reached the maximum that is theoretically possible. Science, this issue p. 988; see also p. 976 A cobalt atom bound to a single oxygen site on magnesia has the maximum magnetic anisotropy allowed for a transition metal [Also see Perspective by Khajetoorians and Wiebe] Designing systems with large magnetic anisotropy is critical to realize nanoscopic magnets. Thus far, the magnetic anisotropy energy per atom in single-molecule magnets and ferromagnetic films remains typically one to two orders of magnitude below the theoretical limit imposed by the atomic spin-orbit interaction. We realized the maximum magnetic anisotropy for a 3d transition metal atom by coordinating a single Co atom to the O site of an MgO(100) surface. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy reveals a record-high zero-field splitting of 58 millielectron volts as well as slow relaxation of the Co atom’s magnetization. This striking behavior originates from the dominating axial ligand field at the O adsorption site, which leads to out-of-plane uniaxial anisotropy while preserving the gas-phase orbital moment of Co, as observed with x-ray magnetic circular dichroism.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Rasmus Westerström; Jan Dreiser; Cinthia Piamonteze; Matthias Muntwiler; S. Weyeneth; Harald Brune; Stefano Rusponi; Frithjof Nolting; Alexey A. Popov; Shangfeng Yang; Lothar Dunsch; Thomas Greber
The magnetism of DySc(2)N@C(80) endofullerene was studied with X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) and a magnetometer with a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) down to temperatures of 2 K and in fields up to 7 T. XMCD shows hysteresis of the 4f spin and orbital moment in Dy(III) ions. SQUID magnetometry indicates hysteresis below 6 K, while thermal and nonthermal relaxation is observed. Dilution of DySc(2)N@C(80) samples with C(60) increases the zero-field 4f electron relaxation time at 2 K to several hours.
Science | 2016
Fabio Donati; Stefano Rusponi; Sebastian Stepanow; Christian Wäckerlin; Aparajita Singha; Luca Persichetti; Romana Baltic; Katharina Diller; F. Patthey; Edgar Fernandes; Jan Dreiser; Ž. Šljivančanin; Kurt Kummer; Corneliu Nistor; Pietro Gambardella; Harald Brune
Stable magnets from single atoms An important goal in molecular magnetism is to create a permanent magnet from a single atom. Metal atoms adsorbed on surfaces can develop strong magnetization in an applied field (paramagnetism). Donati et al. show that single holmium atoms adsorbed on a magnesium oxide film grown on a silver substrate show residual magnetism for temperatures up to 30 K and bistabilty that lasts for 1500 s at 10 K (see the Perspective by Khajetoorians and Heinrich). The atom avoids spin relaxation by a combination of quantum-state symmetry and by the oxide film preventing the spin from interacting with the underlying metal via tunneling. Science, this issue p. 318; see also p. 296 A single holmium atom on a magnesium oxide film can retain its magnetic moment up to 30 kelvin. [Also see Perspective by Khajetoorians and Heinrich] A permanent magnet retains a substantial fraction of its saturation magnetization in the absence of an external magnetic field. Realizing magnetic remanence in a single atom allows for storing and processing information in the smallest unit of matter. We show that individual holmium (Ho) atoms adsorbed on ultrathin MgO(100) layers on Ag(100) exhibit magnetic remanence up to a temperature of 30 kelvin and a relaxation time of 1500 seconds at 10 kelvin. This extraordinary stability is achieved by the realization of a symmetry-protected magnetic ground state and by decoupling the Ho spin from the underlying metal by a tunnel barrier.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
M. Salluzzo; Stefano Gariglio; Daniela Stornaiuolo; V. Sessi; Stefano Rusponi; Cinthia Piamonteze; G. M. De Luca; M. Minola; D. Marré; Alessandro Gadaleta; H. Brune; F. Nolting; N. B. Brookes; G. Ghiringhelli
Possible ferromagnetism induced in otherwise nonmagnetic materials has been motivating intense research in complex oxide heterostructures. Here we show that a confined magnetism is realized at the interface between SrTiO3 and two insulating polar oxides, BiMnO3 and LaAlO3. By using polarization dependent x-ray absorption spectroscopy, we find that in both cases the magnetism can be stabilized by a negative exchange interaction between the electrons transferred to the interface and local magnetic moments. These local magnetic moments are associated with magnetic Ti3+ ions at the interface itself for LaAlO3/SrTiO3 and to Mn3+ ions in the overlayer for BiMnO3/SrTiO3. In LaAlO3/SrTiO3 the induced magnetism is quenched by annealing in oxygen, suggesting a decisive role of oxygen vacancies in this phenomenon.
Applied Physics Letters | 1999
Stefano Rusponi; Giovanni Costantini; F. Buatier de Mongeot; C. Boragno; U. Valbusa
Surface etching by ion sputtering, besides producing equilibrium-oriented patterns similar to those obtained by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), can also be used to pattern the surface along nonequilibrium orientations, thus extending the possibilities of MBE. By tuning the competition between ion erosion at grazing angles and diffusion-induced surface reorganization, it is, for example, possible to pattern a substrate characterized by a square symmetry with a well-ordered ripple structure running along any desired direction.
Chemical Science | 2012
Jan Dreiser; Kasper S. Pedersen; Cinthia Piamonteze; Stefano Rusponi; Zaher Salman; Md. Ehesan Ali; Magnus Schau-Magnussen; Christian Aa. Thuesen; Stergios Piligkos; Høgni Weihe; Hannu Mutka; Oliver Waldmann; Peter M. Oppeneer; Jesper Bendix; F. Nolting; Harald Brune
We report on the synthesis, crystal structure and magnetic characterisation of the trinuclear, fluoride-bridged, molecular nanomagnet [Dy(hfac)3(H2O)–CrF2(py)4–Dy(hfac)3(NO3)] (1) (hfacH = 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetone, py = pyridine) and a closely related dinuclear species [Dy(hfac)4–CrF2(py)4]·½CHCl3 (2). Element-specific magnetisation curves obtained on 1 by X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) allow us to directly observe the field-induced transition from a ferrimagnetic to a ferromagnetic arrangement of the Dy and Cr magnetic moments. By fitting a spin-Hamiltonian model to the XMCD data we extract a weak antiferromagnetic exchange coupling of j = −0.18 cm−1 between the DyIII and CrIII ions. The value found from XMCD is consistent with SQUID magnetometry and inelastic neutron scattering measurements. Furthermore, alternating current susceptibility and muon-spin relaxation measurements reveal that 1 shows thermally activated relaxation of magnetisation with a small effective barrier for magnetisation reversal of Δeff = 3 cm−1. Density-functional theory calculations show that the Dy–Cr couplings originate from superexchange via the fluoride bridges.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2012
Cinthia Piamonteze; Uwe Flechsig; Stefano Rusponi; Jan Dreiser; Jakoba Heidler; Marcus Schmidt; Reto Wetter; Marco Calvi; Thomas J. Schmidt; Helena Pruchova; Juraj Krempasky; Christoph Quitmann; Harald Brune; Frithjof Nolting
X-Treme is a soft X-ray beamline recently built in the Swiss Light Source at the Paul Scherrer Institut in collaboration with École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The beamline is dedicated to polarization-dependent X-ray absorption spectroscopy at high magnetic fields and low temperature. The source is an elliptically polarizing undulator. The end-station has a superconducting 7 T-2 T vector magnet, with sample temperature down to 2 K and is equipped with an in situ sample preparation system for surface science. The beamline commissioning measurements, which show a resolving power of 8000 and a maximum flux at the sample of 4.7 × 10(12) photons s(-1), are presented. Scientific examples showing X-ray magnetic circular and X-ray magnetic linear dichroism measurements are also presented.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Christian Wäckerlin; Fabio Donati; Aparajita Singha; Romana Baltic; Stefano Rusponi; Katharina Diller; F. Patthey; Marina Pivetta; Yanhua Lan; Svetlana Klyatskaya; Mario Ruben; Harald Brune; Jan Dreiser
TbPc2 single-molecule magnets adsorbed on a magnesium oxide tunnel barrier exhibit record magnetic remanence, record hysteresis opening, perfect out-of-plane alignment of the magnetic easy axes, and self-assembly into a well-ordered layer.
ACS Nano | 2012
M. Papagno; Stefano Rusponi; P. M. Sheverdyaeva; S. Vlaic; Markus Etzkorn; Daniela Pacilé; Paolo Moras; C. Carbone; Harald Brune
We investigate the effects of Na adsorption on the electronic structure of bare and Ir cluster superlattice-covered epitaxial graphene on Ir(111) using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy. At Na saturation coverage, a massive charge migration from sodium atoms to graphene raises the graphene Fermi level by ~1.4 eV relative to its neutrality point. We find that Na is adsorbed on top of the graphene layer, and when coadsorbed onto an Ir cluster superlattice, it results in the opening of a large band gap of Δ(Na/Ir/G) = 740 meV, comparable to the one of Ge and with preserved high group velocity of the charge carriers.
Surface Science | 1998
E Giudice; E Magnano; Stefano Rusponi; C. Boragno; U. Valbusa
Abstract The morphology of C60 films deposited on a Ag(001) single crystal has been studied using an UHV-STM. The C60 molecules are arranged in a quasi-hexagonal c(6×4) structure, having the long axis along the 〈110〉 direction of the Ag surface. Due to the existence of two equivalent directions, the C60 film presents different domains, separated by dislocation lines. In each domain, peculiar structures of bright C60 molecules have been resolved. These structures are due not to geometric effects, but to non-homogeneous charge distributions and different chemical bonding with the Ag substrate.