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Journal of Applied Physics
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Microstructure and magnetic anisotropy of ultrathin Co/Pt multilayers grown on GaAs (1̄1̄1̄) by molecular-beam epitaxy

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Abstract

Multilayers of (Co3 Å, Pt15 Å) x, x=15 or 30 repeats, with or without a 200 Å silver buffer layer, were grown on GaAs (111) substrates by molecular-beam epitaxy. Vibrating sample magnetometry measurements confirmed that the samples with the Ag buffer layer show strong uniaxial magnetic anisotropy perpendicular to the surface. The perpendicular anisotropy exhibited by these metallic superlattices is discussed in terms of the microstructure of the overall multilayer stack, as well as the structural characteristics of the Co interface layer. Samples grown on the Ag buffer layer show strong (111) texture with 30-40-nm-size twin-related grains. These grains, correspond to the two possible (111) stacking sequence for an fcc lattice, i.e., double positioning. However, direct growth on GaAs (111) results in randomly oriented 10-20 nm grains. All samples exhibit a repeat period of 1.83 nm in both low-angle reflectivity and high-angle Θ-2Θ x-ray scattering measurements. In addition, transverse scans through the low-angle multilayer Bragg peaks show the interfaces to be diffuse in nature indicative of considerable in-plane inhomogeneity and/or compound formation. High-resolution electron microscopy measurements of cross sections compared with image simulations confirm that the interface layer is diffuse and its stoichiometry is such that the Co occupation is less than 40%. Redistribution of Co should then extend over at least four monolayers. The nanostructure of the samples grown with the Ag buffer layer comprises an eight atomic layer repeat with the Co interface layer diffuse over four monolayers. The microstructure is strongly (111) textured with columns of twin related 30-nm-sized grains. It is suggested that the combination of interdiffusion, highly oriented but twin-related columnar growth, small grain size with a possible nanometer-scale second phase may be the key to the understanding of the perpendicular anisotropy observed in these (111) superlattices.

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Journal of Applied Physics

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