A Minimal tight-binding model for ferromagnetic canted bilayer manganites

Half-metallicity in materials has been a subject of extensive research due to its potential for applications in spintronics. Ferromagnetic manganites have been seen as a good candidate, and aside from a small minority-spin pocket observed in La\(_{2-2x}\)Sr\(_{1+2x}\)Mn\(_{2}\)O\(_{7}\) \((x=0.38)\)...

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Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Baublitz, M, Lane, C, Lin, Hsin, Hasnain Hafiz, Markiewicz, R S, Barbiellini, B, Sun, Z, Dessau, D S, Bansil, A
Format Paper Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 15.12.2014
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Summary:Half-metallicity in materials has been a subject of extensive research due to its potential for applications in spintronics. Ferromagnetic manganites have been seen as a good candidate, and aside from a small minority-spin pocket observed in La\(_{2-2x}\)Sr\(_{1+2x}\)Mn\(_{2}\)O\(_{7}\) \((x=0.38)\), transport measurements show that ferromagnetic manganites essentially behave like half metals. Here we develop robust tight-binding models to describe the electronic band structure of the majority as well as minority spin states of ferromagnetic, spin-canted antiferromagnetic, and fully antiferromagnetic bilayer manganites. Both the bilayer coupling between the MnO\(_2\) planes and the mixing of the \(|x^2 - y^2>\) and \(|3z^2 - r^2>\) Mn 3d orbitals play an important role in the subtle behavior of the bilayer splitting. Effects of \(k_z\) dispersion are included.
Bibliography:SourceType-Working Papers-1
ObjectType-Working Paper/Pre-Print-1
content type line 50
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1412.4728