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Dive into the research topics where Valeria Lauter is active.

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Featured researches published by Valeria Lauter.


Nature Materials | 2012

Probing oxygen vacancy concentration and homogeneity in solid-oxide fuel-cell cathode materials on the subunit-cell level

Young-Min Kim; Jun He; Michael D. Biegalski; Hailemariam Ambaye; Valeria Lauter; Hans M. Christen; Sokrates T. Pantelides; Stephen J. Pennycook; Sergei V. Kalinin; Albina Y. Borisevich

Oxygen vacancy distributions and dynamics directly control the operation of solid-oxide fuel cells and are intrinsically coupled with magnetic, electronic and transport properties of oxides. For understanding the atomistic mechanisms involved during operation of the cell it is highly desirable to know the distribution of vacancies on the unit-cell scale. Here, we develop an approach for direct mapping of oxygen vacancy concentrations based on local lattice parameter measurements by scanning transmission electron microscopy. The concept of chemical expansivity is demonstrated to be applicable on the subunit-cell level: local stoichiometry variations produce local lattice expansion that can be quantified. This approach was successfully applied to lanthanum strontium cobaltite thin films epitaxially grown on substrates of different symmetry, where polarized neutron reflectometry revealed a strong difference in magnetic properties. The different vacancy content found in the two films suggests the change in oxygen chemical potential as a source of distinct magnetic properties, opening pathways for structural tuning of the vacancy concentrations and their gradients.


Nature | 2016

A high-temperature ferromagnetic topological insulating phase by proximity coupling

Ferhat Katmis; Valeria Lauter; Flavio S. Nogueira; Badih A. Assaf; Michelle E. Jamer; Peng Wei; Biswarup Satpati; J. W. Freeland; Ilya Eremin; D. Heiman; Pablo Jarillo-Herrero; Jagadeesh S. Moodera

Topological insulators are insulating materials that display conducting surface states protected by time-reversal symmetry, wherein electron spins are locked to their momentum. This unique property opens up new opportunities for creating next-generation electronic, spintronic and quantum computation devices. Introducing ferromagnetic order into a topological insulator system without compromising its distinctive quantum coherent features could lead to the realization of several predicted physical phenomena. In particular, achieving robust long-range magnetic order at the surface of the topological insulator at specific locations without introducing spin-scattering centres could open up new possibilities for devices. Here we use spin-polarized neutron reflectivity experiments to demonstrate topologically enhanced interface magnetism by coupling a ferromagnetic insulator (EuS) to a topological insulator (Bi2Se3) in a bilayer system. This interfacial ferromagnetism persists up to room temperature, even though the ferromagnetic insulator is known to order ferromagnetically only at low temperatures (<17 K). The magnetism induced at the interface resulting from the large spin–orbit interaction and the spin–momentum locking of the topological insulator surface greatly enhances the magnetic ordering (Curie) temperature of this bilayer system. The ferromagnetism extends ~2 nm into the Bi2Se3 from the interface. Owing to the short-range nature of the ferromagnetic exchange interaction, the time-reversal symmetry is broken only near the surface of a topological insulator, while leaving its bulk states unaffected. The topological magneto-electric response originating in such an engineered topological insulator could allow efficient manipulation of the magnetization dynamics by an electric field, providing an energy-efficient topological control mechanism for future spin-based technologies.


ACS Nano | 2014

Thickness-dependent crossover from charge- to strain-mediated magnetoelectric coupling in ferromagnetic/piezoelectric oxide heterostructures.

Steven R. Spurgeon; Jennifer D. Sloppy; Despoina M. Kepaptsoglou; Prasanna V. Balachandran; Siamak Nejati; J. Karthik; Anoop R. Damodaran; Craig L. Johnson; Hailemariam Ambaye; Richard Goyette; Valeria Lauter; Quentin M. Ramasse; Juan Carlos Idrobo; Kenneth K. S. Lau; Samuel E. Lofland; James M. Rondinelli; Lane W. Martin; Mitra L. Taheri

Magnetoelectric oxide heterostructures are proposed active layers for spintronic memory and logic devices, where information is conveyed through spin transport in the solid state. Incomplete theories of the coupling between local strain, charge, and magnetic order have limited their deployment into new information and communication technologies. In this study, we report direct, local measurements of strain- and charge-mediated magnetization changes in the La0.7Sr0.3MnO3/PbZr0.2Ti0.8O3 system using spatially resolved characterization techniques in both real and reciprocal space. Polarized neutron reflectometry reveals a graded magnetization that results from both local structural distortions and interfacial screening of bound surface charge from the adjacent ferroelectric. Density functional theory calculations support the experimental observation that strain locally suppresses the magnetization through a change in the Mn-eg orbital polarization. We suggest that this local coupling and magnetization suppression may be tuned by controlling the manganite and ferroelectric layer thicknesses, with direct implications for device applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Strain induced giant magnetism in epitaxial Fe16N2 thin film

Nian Ji; Valeria Lauter; Xiaowei Zhang; Hailemariam Ambaye; Jian Ping Wang

We report a direct observation of giant saturation magnetization in Fe16N2. By exploiting thin film epitaxy, which provides controlled biaxial stress to create lattice distortion, we demonstrate that giant magnetism can be established in Fe16N2 thin film coherently grown on MgO (001) substrate. Explored by polarized neutron reflectometry, the depth-dependent saturation magnetic induction (Bs) of epitaxial Fe16N2 thin films is visualized, which reveals a strong correlation with the in-plane lattice parameter and tensile strain developed at near substrate interface. With controlled growth process and dimension adjustment, the Bs of these films can be modulated over a broad range, from ∼2.1 Tesla (T) (normal Bs) up to ∼3.1 T (giant Bs).


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

The study of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in CoFeB sandwiched by MgO and tantalum layers using polarized neutron reflectometry

T. Zhu; Y. Yang; R. C. Yu; H. Ambaye; Valeria Lauter; J. Q. Xiao

The perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) in CoFeB sandwiched by MgO and tantalum layers was investigated using anomalous Hall effect and polarized neutron reflectometry. It was found that a large PMA in the CoFeB above MgO layer was related to its low magnetization compared to the case of CoFeB under MgO layer. Using the sensitivity of neutrons to the absorption cross-section of boron, we unambiguously determined the depth profile of the boron distribution and showed that after annealing, most of the boron diffused to form a 2-nm-thick interface layer between the CoFeB and tantalum layers.


Nature Communications | 2015

Polarization screening-induced magnetic phase gradients at complex oxide interfaces

Steven R. Spurgeon; Prasanna V. Balachandran; Despoina M. Kepaptsoglou; Anoop R. Damodaran; J. Karthik; Siamak Nejati; Lewys Jones; Haile Ambaye; Valeria Lauter; Quentin M. Ramasse; Kenneth K. S. Lau; Lane W. Martin; James M. Rondinelli; Mitra L. Taheri

Thin-film oxide heterostructures show great potential for use in spintronic memories, where electronic charge and spin are coupled to transport information. Here we use a La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 (LSMO)/PbZr0.2Ti0.8O3 (PZT) model system to explore how local variations in electronic and magnetic phases mediate this coupling. We present direct, local measurements of valence, ferroelectric polarization and magnetization, from which we map the phases at the LSMO/PZT interface. We combine these experimental results with electronic structure calculations to elucidate the microscopic interactions governing the interfacial response of this system. We observe a magnetic asymmetry at the LSMO/PZT interface that depends on the local PZT polarization and gives rise to gradients in local magnetic moments; this is associated with a metal-insulator transition at the interface, which results in significantly different charge-transfer screening lengths. This study establishes a framework to understand the fundamental asymmetries of magnetoelectric coupling in oxide heterostructures.


Nature Communications | 2014

Kondo physics in non-local metallic spin transport devices

Liam O'Brien; Michael J. Erickson; D. Spivak; Haile Ambaye; R. J. Goyette; Valeria Lauter; P. A. Crowell; Chris Leighton

The non-local spin-valve is pivotal in spintronics, enabling separation of charge and spin currents, disruptive potential applications and the study of pressing problems in the physics of spin injection and relaxation. Primary among these problems is the perplexing non-monotonicity in the temperature-dependent spin accumulation in non-local ferromagnetic/non-magnetic metal structures, where the spin signal decreases at low temperatures. Here we show that this effect is strongly correlated with the ability of the ferromagnetic to form dilute local magnetic moments in the NM. This we achieve by studying a significantly expanded range of ferromagnetic/non-magnetic combinations. We argue that local moments, formed by ferromagnetic/non-magnetic interdiffusion, suppress the injected spin polarization and diffusion length via a manifestation of the Kondo effect, thus explaining all observations. We further show that this suppression can be completely quenched, even at interfaces that are highly susceptible to the effect, by insertion of a thin non-moment-supporting interlayer.


Nature Communications | 2016

Emerging magnetism and anomalous Hall effect in iridate–manganite heterostructures

John Nichols; Xiang Gao; Shinbuhm Lee; Tricia L. Meyer; J. W. Freeland; Valeria Lauter; Di Yi; Jian Liu; Daniel Haskel; Jonathan R. Petrie; Er-Jia Guo; Andreas Herklotz; Dongkyu Lee; Thomas Ward; Gyula Eres; Michael Fitzsimmons; Ho Nyung Lee

Strong Coulomb repulsion and spin–orbit coupling are known to give rise to exotic physical phenomena in transition metal oxides. Initial attempts to investigate systems, where both of these fundamental interactions are comparably strong, such as 3d and 5d complex oxide superlattices, have revealed properties that only slightly differ from the bulk ones of the constituent materials. Here we observe that the interfacial coupling between the 3d antiferromagnetic insulator SrMnO3 and the 5d paramagnetic metal SrIrO3 is enormously strong, yielding an anomalous Hall response as the result of charge transfer driven interfacial ferromagnetism. These findings show that low dimensional spin–orbit entangled 3d–5d interfaces provide an avenue to uncover technologically relevant physical phenomena unattainable in bulk materials.


Physical Review B | 2016

Enhancing interfacial magnetization with a ferroelectric

Tricia L. Meyer; Andreas Herklotz; Valeria Lauter; J. W. Freeland; John Nichols; Er-Jia Guo; Shinbuhm Lee; T. Zac Ward; Nina Balke; Sergei V. Kalinin; Michael R. Fitzsimmons; Ho Nyung Lee

Ferroelectric control of the electronic and magnetic properties of a correlated oxide provides new opportunities for fundamental science and practical device applications. However, the exploding interest in ferroelectric control of magnetic interfaces, which typically happens in a few nanometers, has been inhibited by the lack of appropriate characterization techniques. Here, the authors have used polarized neutron reflectivity (PNR), a nondestructive yet powerful technique, to directly probe the evolution of the interfacial magnetism at the interface between ferromagnetic La


Scientific Reports | 2015

Synthetic magnetoelectric coupling in a nanocomposite multiferroic

Prashant Jain; Qingfeng Wang; Mónica Roldán; Artur Glavic; Valeria Lauter; Christian Urban; Zhenxing Bi; Towfiq Ahmed; Jinlong Zhu; Maria Varela; Quanxi Jia; Michael Fitzsimmons

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Haile Ambaye

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Hailemariam Ambaye

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Artur Glavic

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Hans M. Christen

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Jagadeesh S. Moodera

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nian Ji

University of Minnesota

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Hans J. Lauter

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Thomas Ward

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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