First-principle study of spin transport property in L10-FePd(001)/graphene heterojunction
Abstract
In our previous work, we synthesized a metal/2D material heterointerface consisting of L10-ordered iron-palladium (FePd) and graphene (Gr) called FePd(001)/Gr. This system has been explored by both experimental measurements and theoretical calculations. In this study, we focus on a heterojunction composed of FePd and multilayer graphene referred to as FePd(001)/m-Gr/FePd(001), where m represents the number of graphene layers. We perform first-principles calculations to predict their spin-dependent transport properties. The quantitative calculations of spin-resolved conductance and magnetoresistance (MR) ratio (150-200%) suggest that the proposed structure can function as a magnetic tunnel junction in spintronics applications. We also find that an increase in m not only reduces conductance but also changes transport properties from the tunneling behavior to the graphite π-band-like behavior. Additionally, we investigate the spin-transfer torque-induced magnetization switching behavior of our blue junction structures black using micromagnetic simulations. Furthermore, we examine the impact of lateral displacements (``sliding'') at the interface and find that the spin transport properties remain robust despite these changes; this is the advantage of two-dimensional material hetero-interfaces over traditional insulating barrier layers such as MgO.
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