SmN; a zero-moment ferromagnetic semiconductor

ORAL

Abstract

The rare-earth nitrides condense into the NaCl structure with a slowly-varying lattice constant across the series. We have grown a number of them, as polycrystalline and/or epitaxial films, and so far find them all to be semiconductors with a ferromagnetic phase at low temperature. SmN is especially interesting for its near cancellation between spin and orbital moments, in which the spins order ferro-magnetically below 27 K with a net magnetic moment of order 0.03 $\mu _{B}$/Sm. It is thus a nearly fringe-field free ferromagnetic semiconductor that couples so weakly to an applied field that its coercive field is very large; both of these properties are attractive for spintronics.

Authors

  • Joe Trodahl

    • Victoria University of Wellington
  • Ben Ruck

    • Victoria University of Wellington
    • The MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology
  • Claire Meyer

    • N\'eel Institute, Grenoble
  • Andrew Preston

    • Boston University
  • Bart Ludbrook

    • Victoria University of Wellington
  • Julio Criginski Cezar

    • ESRF, Grenoble