Cyrus F. Hirjibehedin, Christopher P. Lutz, et al.
Science
Magnetic anisotropy allows magnets to maintain their direction of magnetization over time. Using a scanning tunneling microscope to observe spin excitations, we determined the orientation and strength of the anisotropies of individual iron and manganese atoms on a thin layer of copper nitride. The relative intensities of the inelastic tunneling processes are consistent with dipolar interactions, as seen for inelastic neutron scattering. First-principles calculations indicate that the magnetic atoms become incorporated into a polar covalent surface molecular network in the copper nitride. These structures, which provide atom-by-atom accessibility via local probes, have the potential for engineering anisotropies large enough to produce stable magnetization at low temperatures for a single atomic spin.
Cyrus F. Hirjibehedin, Christopher P. Lutz, et al.
Science
Alexander F. Otte, Markus Ternes, et al.
Nature Physics
Sebastian Loth, Kirsten Von Bergmann, et al.
Nature Physics
Markus Ternes, Wolf-Dieter Schneider, et al.
Physical Review B - CMMP