Abstract
(Ga,Mn)As is at the forefront of spintronics research exploring the synergy of ferromagnetism with the physics and the technology of semiconductors. However, the electronic structure of this model spintronics material has been debated and the systematic and reproducible control of the basic micromagnetic parameters and semiconducting doping trends has not been established. Here we show that seemingly small departures from the individually optimized synthesis protocols yield non-systematic doping trends, extrinsic charge and moment compensation, and inhomogeneities that conceal intrinsic properties of (Ga,Mn)As. On the other hand, we demonstrate reproducible, well controlled and microscopically understood semiconducting doping trends and micromagnetic parameters in our series of carefully optimized epilayers. Hand-in-hand with the optimization of the material synthesis, we have developed experimental capabilities based on the magneto-optical pump-and-probe method that allowed us to simultaneously determine the magnetic anisotropy, Gilbert damping and spin stiffness constants from one consistent set of measured data.
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Introduction
Under equilibrium growth conditions, the incorporation of magnetic Mn ions into GaAs is limited to ~0.1%. To circumvent the solubility problem, a non-equilibrium, low-temperature molecular-beam-epitaxy (LT-MBE) technique was employed, which led to first successful growths of (Ga,Mn)As ternary alloys with more than 1% Mn and to the discovery of ferromagnetism in these materials1,2,3,4. The compounds qualify as ferromagnetic semiconductors to the extent that their magnetic and other properties can be altered by the usual semiconductor electronics engineering variables, such as doping, electric fields, or light. (Ga,Mn)As has become a test-bed material for spintronic research, in particular for exploring known and discovering new magneto-transport and magneto-optical (MO) phenomena. (For more details on (Ga,Mn)As spintronics research, see Supplementary Note 1).
In ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As, the theory of spin-orbit-coupled GaAs bands modified by the exchange splitting and alloying effects of randomly distributed MnGa acceptors/local-moments represents a common basis for describing its semiconducting and ferromagnetic properties5. The kinetic-exchange model implementation of this valence band theory and the microscopic tight-binding Anderson approach or abinitio density functional theory can all be shown to be mutually consistent on the level of atomic and orbital resolved band structure6. (For more details on the theory of (Ga,Mn)As, see Supplementary Figs S1–S3, and Supplementary Note 2).
In a recurring alternative proposal, the Fermi level in ferromagnetic materials with ~1020–1021 cm−3 Mn-acceptor densities is assumed to still reside in a narrow impurity band detached from the valence band, that is, the band structure keeps the form closely reminiscent of a single isolated MnGa impurity level7,8,9. Several phenomenological variants of the impurity band model have been proposed whose assumed spectroscopic characteristics are, however, mutually inconsistent and have not been recreated from microscopic band structure theories6. Since to date no framework has been introduced that would allow to test the validity of the impurity band model by comparing microscopic atomic orbital based theory calculations to experiment, it is primarily the experimental findings which have served as a basis for postulating the impurity band picture. A common feature of these experimental reports is the limited attention paid to the details of the synthesis of this highly non-equilibrium alloy7,9. As we show in this paper, careful material optimization is, however, of central importance. Small departures from optimized sample synthesis obscure the doping trends and experimental determination of intrinsic micromagnetic parameters of the material. The justification of the impurity band picture by the experiments in unoptimized materials is therefore unreliable. This leaves the impurity band models without an adequate microscopic theory or experimental support. On the other hand, the valence band model is linked in a transparent way to density functional or tight-binding Anderson microscopic theories, as pointed out above. Simultaneously, the microscopically justified theory provides consistent predictions for the broad range of semiconducting doping trends and micromagnetic parameters, we report below on the entire series of the optimized (Ga,Mn)As materials. Our work, therefore, leads to the conclusion that there is no physics grounds for the ‘battle of the bands’10 in (Ga,Mn)As.
Results
Optimized synthesis of (Ga,Mn)As epilayers
The essential importance of the optimization of the (Ga,Mn)As synthesis is illustrated in Fig. 1, where we plot, side-by-side, basic electrical and magnetic characteristics of two medium, 7% nominally Mn-doped epilayers. (The determination of the nominal Mn concentration in the as-grown epilayers is detailed in Methods). The left column figures (Fig. 1a–c) show data measured on a material, which we prepared under carefully optimized conditions for the given nominal Mn doping. The sample has sharp Curie point singularities in magnetization and electrical transport typical of uniform, high-quality itinerant ferromagnets (Fig. 1a)11. Magnetization precession damping factor and spin-wave resonances (SWRs) obtained from MO measurements (Fig. 1b) confirm the high magnetic quality of the material. As we discuss in detail below, the initial decrease of the damping factor with frequency followed by a frequency-independent part (Fig. 1b) is typical of uniform ferromagnets and allows us to accurately infer the intrinsic Gilbert damping constant12. Similarly, the observed Kittel SWR modes of a uniform ferromagnet (Fig. 1c) allow us to measure accurately the magnetic anisotropy and spin stiffness parameters of (Ga,Mn)As, as detailed below.
The right column data (Fig. 1d–f) were measured on a 7% Mn-doped epilayer differing from the sample of the left column in only one of the synthesis parameters not being optimized. As we discuss below, the stoichiometry, substrate growth temperature, post-growth annealing temperature and time and epilayer thickness are among the key synthesis parameters. (For more details on our materials synthesis, see Methods.) All these parameters were equally carefully optimized in the two samples, except for the epilayer thickness. In the medium and high Mn-doped samples, full material optimization is possible only for film thicknesses 50 nm. The epilayer whose measurements are shown in the right panels of Fig. 1 is 500 nm thick. Its magnetization and transport Curie point singularities are largely smeared out, the damping factor is strongly frequency dependent13, and alternating number of SWRs is observed with increasing applied field whose spacings are inconsistent with Kittel modes. Clearly, the material is non-uniform, the magnetization and transport data indicate strong moment and charge compensation by extrinsic impurities, and for this material it is impossible to reliably extract any of the intrinsic micromagnetic parameters of (Ga,Mn)As.
In Fig. 2, we illustrate that even in films thinner than 50 nm, apparently small changes in the remaining key synthesis parameters can dramatically affect the material quality. It is broadly accepted that staying near the 1:1 stoichiometric As:(Ga+Mn) ratio is favourable for the LT-MBE growth of (Ga,Mn)As14,15. In Fig. 2a, we plot our optimal growth temperature TG for the stoichiometric growth as a function of the nominal Mn-doping x. (We used the GaAs band-edge spectrometer to measure the substrate temperature and the predictive substrate heater control to stabilize the TG during the growth). Note that the optimal TG remains near (from the lower temperature side) the 2D/3D growth-mode boundary, which implies its strong dependence on x. In Fig. 2b, we plot the Curie temperature TC as a function of the annealing time for the optimal TG=190 °C for the 13% Mn-doped sample and for two annealing temperatures. One is the optimal annealing temperature TA=160 °C and the other one is 20 °C lower. Clearly, the record TC=188 K sample is obtained by optimizing simultaneously the annealing time and TA. Figure 2c illustrate how the increasing TC is accompanied by the improving material quality (reduction of extrinsic compensation and sample inhomogeneity) over the annealing time for optimal TG and TA. To highlight the crucial importance of the optimal TG during the growth, we show in Fig. 2e the same annealing sequence measurements as in Fig. 2c on a 13%-doped sample grown at a temperature of only 10 °C below the optimal TG. In striking contrast to the material grown at the optimal TG, the sample is insulating and paramagnetic in the as-grown state. Ferromagnetism and metallic conduction can be recovered by annealing, however, the compensation and inhomogeneity cannot be removed and the ferromagnetic transition temperature remains 10 °C below the TC of the sample grown at the optimal TG. Similarly lower-quality samples are obtained by growing at higher than the optimal TG.
Figures 1 and 2 illustrate the following general conclusions we can draw from our extensive material optimization studies. Inferring doping trends in basic material properties of (Ga,Mn)As from sample series mixing as-grown and annealed materials, as has been often the case in the literature7,9, is unsuitable as the quality of the samples may vastly vary in such a series. Chosing one a priori-fixed TG, TA and annealing time for a range of Mn dopings, as is also common in the literature7,9,16,17, is unlikely to produce a high-quality, uniform and uncompensated (Ga,Mn)As material even for one of the considered dopings and is bound to produce lower quality samples for most of the studied Mn dopings. Finally, reliable measurements of intrinsic semiconducting and magnetic properties on optimized (Ga,Mn)As samples require exceedingly long annealing times for film thicknesses 50 nm and are unachievable in ~100 nm and thicker films by the known approaches to the (Ga,Mn)As epilayer synthesis.
Doping trends in the series of optimized (Ga,Mn)As epilayers
After finding the optimal growth and post-growth conditions for each individual nominal doping, we obtained a series of comparably high-quality samples spanning a wide range of Mn dopings. At nominal dopings below ~0.1%, the materials from the series are paramagnetic, strongly insulating, showing signatures of the activated transport corresponding to valence band —impurity band transitions at intermediate temperatures, and valence band—conduction band transitions at high temperatures (Fig. 3a). For higher nominal dopings, 0.5x1.5%, no clear signatures of activation from the valence band to the impurity band are seen in the transport, confirming that the bands start to overlap and mix, yet the materials remain insulating. At x≈1.5%, the low-temperature conductivity of the film increases abruptly by several orders of magnitude (Fig. 3b), and the system turns into a degenerate semiconductor. The onset of ferromagnetism occurs already on the insulating side of the insulator-to-metal transition at x≈1%. All metallic samples within the series have sharp Curie point singularities (Fig. 3c).
The hole density p measured from the high-field Hall effect (see Supplementary Fig. S4, Supplementary Equation S1, and Supplementary Note 4 for more details) increases with increasing doping in the optimized materials (Fig. 3d). Similarly, the magnetization and TC steadily increase with x (Fig. 3e). Assuming 4.5 μB per Mn atom18 (μB is the Bohr magneton), we can estimate the density NMn of uncompesated MnGa moments from the magnetization data (see left y axis in Fig. 3e). As there is no apparent deficit of p compared with NMn and as the interstitial Mn impurity, which is the main extrinsic defect, compensates one local moment but two holes, we conclude that interstitial Mn is completely (within the experimental error) removed in our optimally synthesized epilayers. Hence, our series of (Ga,Mn)As materials have well-controlled characteristics, showing a systematic trend of increasing magnetization with increasing x, increasing TC (reaching 188 K) and increasing hole density. The materials have no measurable charge or moment compensation of the substitutional MnGa impurities and have a large degree of uniformity reflected by sharp Curie point singularities. We point out that this phenomenology is in striking contrast to the non-systematic doping trends in semiconducting and magnetic properties reported, for example, in Dobrowolska et al.,9 on the mixed series of as-grown and annealed, ~100-nm-thick (Ga,Mn)As epilayers prepared without individually optimizing TG, TA and the annealing time.
Micromagnetic parameters of (Ga,Mn)As
Figure 4 demonstrates that the intrinsic micromagnetic parameters of (Ga,Mn)As measured on our carefully optimized materials show also a smooth monotonous doping dependence. As detailed below, their values are characteristic of common band ferromagnets and all the semiconducting and magnetic properties summarized in Figs 3 and 4 are consistent with the microscopically established electronic structure of (Ga,Mn)As (refs 5, 6). We point out that we have confirmed the control and reproducibility of the above material properties of (Ga,Mn)As on the individually optimized films by multiple material synthesis experiments at a given Mn doping in two distinct MBE laboratories in Prague and in Nottingham. This is a positive observation, highly non-trivial for the heavily doped non-equilibrium grown semiconductor, which is essential for the reliable understanding and utilizing the material. Not surprisingly for the highly non-equilibrium synthesis, the growth parameters quoted in this paper should not be taken as a universal recipe for (Ga,Mn)As. The optimal growth and post-growth annealing conditions may vary from one to the other experimental system to an extent, which for our two MBE laboratories is not large but may be beyond the straightforward cross-calibration error bars.
A more than an order of magnitude experimental scatter and a lack of any clear trend as a function of Mn doping can be found in the previous literature for the Gilbert damping and spin stiffness constants (Supplementary Note 3)19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28. Significant variations can be also found in the experimental magnetic anisotropy constants of (Ga,Mn)As (ref. 29). The disarray of the previously measured micromagnetic parameters reflects partly the lack of careful materials optimization but also the limitations of common magnetic characterization techniques when applied to the thin-film dilute-moment (Ga,Mn)As samples. In the remaining part of the paper, we therefore describe in more detail our experimental determination of the micromagnetic parameters of (Ga,Mn)As. Hand-in-hand with the optimization of the material synthesis, we have developed experimental capabilities based on the MO pump-and-probe method that allows us to simultaneously determine the magnetic anisotropy, Gilbert damping and spin stiffness constants from one consistent set of measured data. The possibility to excite and detect precession of ferromagnetic Mn moments in (Ga,Mn)As by this method has been extensively discussed in previous MO studies (see Methods and Supplementary Notes 6–9 for the detailed description of the method)30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41. All experiments presented below were performed at 15 K.
The anisotropy constants, shown in Fig. 4a, were obtained combining three complementary measurements. In the first experiment, we measured the external magnetic field Hext dependence of the precession frequency f of the time-resolved MO signal. In the studied (Ga,Mn)As/GaAs epilayers, the internal magnetic anisotropy fields are dominated by three components. The out-of-plane component Kout is a sum of the thin-film shape anisotropy and the magnetocrystalline anisotropy due to the compressive growth strain in (Ga,Mn)As. The cubic magnetocrystalline anisotropy KC reflects the zinc-blende crystal structure of the host semiconductor. The additional uniaxial anisotropy component along the in-plane diagonal Ku is not associated with any measurable macroscopic strain in the epilayer. The precession frequency is given by,
where g is the Landé g-factor of Mn moments, φ and φH are the in-plane magnetization and external magnetic field angles measured from the [100] crystal axis, and ΔHn is the shift of the resonant field for the higher-index n spin-wave modes with respect to the n=0 uniform precession mode. To uniquely determine the anisotropy constants, the field-dependent precession frequency measurements were complemented by MO experiments with variable polarization angle of the probe beam. The latter measurements allow us to precisely determine the angle of the equilibrium easy axis of the magnetization (Supplementary Note 7)40,41. Finally, we confirmed the consistency of the obtained anisotropy constants by performing static measurements of magnetization hysteresis loops by the superconducting quantum interference device. The sign of Kout implies that all studied (Ga,Mn)As/GaAs materials are in-plane ferromagnets. Note that in the low-doped and high-doped samples with very stable in-plane easy-axes aligned with one of the main crystal directions, the dynamical MO experiments become unfeasible. The overall magnitudes of the anisotropy constants, as well as of the magnetization and TC, are consistently described by the microscopically established band theories of (Ga,Mn)As (ref.5).
The magnetization precession damping factor, shown in Fig. 4b, is obtained by fitting the measured dynamical MO signal to Landau–Lifshitz–Gilbert (LLG) equations using the experimentally obtained magnetic anisotropy constants. The high accuracy of the LLG fits is demonstrated in Fig. 5a on data measured on the 5.2%-doped sample. The obtained dependence of the damping factor on the external magnetic field applied along the [010] and [110] directions is shown in Fig. 5c. At smaller fields, the damping factor is not constant and shows a strong anisotropy with respect to the field angle. When plotted as a function of frequency, however, the dependence on the field-angle disappears, as shown in Fig. 5d. We can therefore conclude that the apparent anisotropy of the damping factor can in our materials be ascribed fully to the field-angle dependence via the precession frequency. In all our studied materials, the frequency-independent Gilbert damping constant α is isotropic and can be accurately determined from MO data with precession frequencies f15 GHz. The MO damping factor phenomenology observed in Fig. 5 (and Fig. 1b) is consistent with corresponding MO measurements in uniform metal ferromagnets12.
We point out that in ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) experiments, the measurement frequency was limited typically to two values, f=9 and 35 GHz, which even in the optimized (Ga,Mn)As materials is not sufficient to reliably separate the intrinsic Gilbert damping constant from the inhomogeneous broadening of the FMR line-width. The dynamical MO measurements, on the other hand, span a large-enough range of frequencies and allow us to extract a consistent set of frequency-independent values of α for our series of optimized ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As materials. We find a systematic doping trend across the series in which the Gilbert constant decreases from ~0.1 to 0.01 when the nominal Mn doping increases from ~2 to 5%, and then remains nearly constant (Fig. 4b). The magnitudes of α and the doping dependence are consistent with Gilbert damping constants in conventional transition metal ferromagnets. In metals, α typically increases with increasing resistivity and is enhanced in alloys with enhanced spin-orbit coupling42,43,44. Similarly, in our measurements in (Ga,Mn)As, the increase of α correlates with a sizable increase of the resistivity in the lower Mn-doped samples. Also, the spin-orbit coupling effects tend to be stronger in the lower doped samples with lower filling of the valence bands and with the carriers closer to the metal–insulator transition5. Theory ascribing magnetization relaxation to the kinetic-exchange coupling of Mn moments with holes residing in the disordered, exchange-split and spin-orbit-coupled valence band of (Ga,Mn)As yields a comparable range of values of α as observed in our measurements19.
The MO pump-and-probe technique utilized in our work allows us in principle also for the direct measurement of the spin stiffness. However, one has to find the rather delicate balance between thin enough epilayers whose material quality can be optimized and thick enough films allowing the observation of the higher-index Kittel spin-wave modes45 of a uniform ferromagnet. For these modes, the spin stiffness parameter D is directly obtained from the measured resonant fields,
where L is the thickness of the ferromagnetic film. The MO pump-and-probe technique has the key advantage here that, unlike FMR, it is not limited to odd index spin-wave modes45. The ability to excite and detect the n=0, 1 and 2 resonances is essential for the observation of the Kittel modes in our optimized (Ga,Mn)As epilayers whose thickness is limited to ~50 nm.
In Fig. 6a, we show an example of the time-dependent MO signal measured in a 48-nm-thick optimized epilayer with 7% nominal Mn doping. Three SWRs are identified in the sample with frequencies f0, f1 and f2, as shown in Fig. 6b. The association of these SWRs with the Kittel modes, described by equation (2), is based on experiments shown in Fig. 6b–e. In Fig. 6c, we plot the dependence of the three detected precession frequencies on the external magnetic field applied along the [010] and [110] crystal axes. At saturation fields, which for the 7% Mn-doped sample are 70 mT, the equilibrium magnetization vector is aligned with Hext and equation (1) with φ=φH can be used to fit the data. We emphasize that all six displayed dependences fn(Hext) for n=0, 1 and 2, and φH=45° and 90° can be accurately fitted by one set of magnetic anisotropy constants. We can therefore use equation (2) to convert the measured frequency spacing of individual SWRs to ΔHn. In Fig. 6d, we show that ΔHn in our optimized epilayers is proportional to n2, as expected for the Kittel modes in homogeneous films.
The magnetic homogeneity and the applicability of equation (2) in our epilayers is further confirmed by the following experiments: We prepared three samples by etching the original 48-nm-thick (Ga,Mn)As film down to the thicknesses of 39, 29 and 15 nm, respectively. As seen in Fig. 6b, the frequency f0 is independent of the film thickness, which confirms that it corresponds to the uniform precession mode and that the film is homogeneous, that is, the magnetic anisotropy constants do not vary across the width of the (Ga,Mn)As epilayer. Note that this is again in striking contrast with the vertical gradient of magnetic anisotropies reported, for example, in Son et al.46 on a ~500-nm-thick unoptimized material. (For another direct evidence of the crucial role of the growth parameters on the material uniformity, compare also results of previous muon spin relaxation measurements in Dunsiger et al.47 and in Storchak et al.48).
The spacing ΔH1 shown in Fig. 6e scales as L−2 and the values of D extracted from the n dependence of the resonant field spacings in the L=48 nm epilayer (Fig. 6d) and from the L dependence of ΔH1 (Fig. 6e) give the same D=2.43±0.15 meV nm2. Identical value of the spin stiffness was also obtained from measurements in an optimized epilayer grown with the same doping and thickness of 18 nm in which we detected the frequencies f0 and f1 and applied equation (2). These measurements confirm the reliability of extracted values of the spin stiffness. We note that the SWR frequencies are determined with high accuracy in our measurements and that the indicated error bars in Fig. 4b reflect the uncertainty of the film thickness (Supplementary Note 5). As shown in Fig. 4b, we observe a consistent, weakly increasing trend in D with increasing doping and values of D between 2 and 3 meVnm2 in the studied ferromagnetic samples with nominal doping 3.8–9%. (Note that apart from the difficulty of exciting magnetization precession in the very low and high-doped samples with stable easy axes, the measurements of D were unfeasible on the lower doping side of the series because of the increasing damping and the corresponding inability to detect the higher SWR modes.) As mentioned in the discussion of Fig. 1 we have tested the inapplicability of the SWR experiments for the direct determination of the spin stiffness in thick non-uniform materials (Supplementary Fig. S5 and Supplementary Note 10). The observed number of modes and the field-dependent frequencies are non-systematic in these unoptimized materials and ΔHn do not show the quadratic scaling with n of the Kittel modes of equation (2) (see Supplementary Fig. S6 and Supplementary Note 10 for more details).
Similar to the Gilbert damping constant, our measured spin stiffness constant in the optimized (Ga,Mn)As epilayers is comparable to the spin stiffness in conventional transition metal ferromagnets49. The large values of the spin stiffness of the order meV nm2 are also consistent with model Hamiltonian and abinitio calculations28,50,51,52, which all consider or obtain the band structure of the ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As with merged valence and impurity bands6. On the other hand, for carriers localized in a narrow impurity band the expected spin stiffness would be small in a dilute moment system like (Ga,Mn)As, in which the magnetic coupling between remote Mn moments is mediated by the carriers53.
Discussion
We have presented a systematic study demonstrating the crucial role of the careful synthesis optimization for understanding the intrinsic semiconducting and magnetic properties of (Ga,Mn)As. Micromagnetic parameters of (Ga,Mn)As measured on our carefully optimized materials show values that are characteristic of common band ferromagnets and all the observed semiconducting and magnetic properties are consistent with the microscopically established electronic structure of (Ga,Mn)As with merged impurity and valence bands. By recognizing that the bands are merged, that is, overlapped and mixed, in the optimized ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As materials, the distinction between ‘valence’ and ‘impurity’ bands becomes mere semantics with no fundamental physics relevance. Simultaneously, it is important to keep in mind that the moderate acceptor binding energy of MnGa shifts the insulator-to-metal transition to orders of magnitude higher doping densities than in the case of common shallow non-magnetic acceptors. Disorder and correlation effects, therefore, have a comparatively more significant role in (Ga,Mn)As than in degenerate semiconductors with common shallow dopants and any simplified one-particle band picture of ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As can only represent a proxy to the electronic structure of the material.
Methods
Optimized materials synthesis
Because of the highly non-equilibrium nature of the heavily-doped ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As, the growth and post-growth annealing procedures have to be individually optimized for each Mn-doping level to obtain films that are as close as possible to idealized uniform (Ga,Mn)As mixed crystals with the minimal density of compensating and other unintentional defects. An extensive set of characterization measurements has to accompany the synthesis to guarantee that the materials show systematic doping trends; monitoring the thermodynamic Curie point singularities is essential for assuring the uniformity and high magnetic quality of the materials11,15,54,55. When omitting the above procedures, extrinsic impurities and sample inhomogeneities can yield non-systematic doping trends and conceal the intrinsic magnetic properties of (Ga,Mn)As.
Our (Ga,Mn)As layers were grown at the growth rate of ~0.2 monolayers per second. The Mn flux, and hence the nominal Mn doping x, was determined by measuring the ratio of the beam equivalent pressures (BEP) of Mn and Ga sources before each growth. The Mn content was cross-checked by secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) and by comparing the growth rates of GaAs and (Ga,Mn)As measured by the oscillations of the reflection high-energy electron diffraction. There are two critical growth parameters of (Ga,Mn)As: the substrate temperature, and the As-to-(Ga+Mn) flux ratio4,14,15,56. At the typical temperatures of ~200 °C, neither an optical pyrometer nor a radiatively coupled temperature sensor are applicable. Instead, we use the GaAs band-edge spectrometer to measure the substrate temperature and the predictive substrate heater control to stabilize the temperature during the growth. For a given As:(Ga+Mn) ratio, the substrate temperature fully determines the growth regime: the growth proceeds two-dimensionally at low temperatures, and turns irreversibly into the 3D growth mode when a critical temperature is exceeded. The scatter of the critical substrate temperature for given doping x and As:(Ga+Mn) ratio is remarkably small, typically less than 2 °C. For a larger As flux, the 2D/3D transition occurs at a higher temperature. The highest quality samples are grown in a narrow window around the 1:1 stoichiometric As:(Ga+Mn) ratio and at the substrate temperature approaching as close as possible from below the 2D/3D critical temperature for given x. The As:(Ga+Mn) ratio was adjusted by the As-cell valve, and calibrated using the As-controlled reflection high-energy electron diffraction oscillations.
The next important factor determining the quality of the resulting (Ga,Mn)As materials are post-growth annealing conditions4,15,54. The common trends in annealing (at temperatures close to the growth temperature) suggest the presence of competing mechanisms. One mechanism yields the increase of TC and is ascribed in a number of reports to the removal of charge and moment compensating interstitial Mn impurities57,58. The removal is slowed down by the growth of an oxide surface layer during annealing54 and an additional mechanism can eventually yield reduction of TC after sufficiently long annealing times, depending on the annealing temperature. The origin of this detrimental mechanism may be in Mn clustering or in the competition between the non-equilibrium (Ga,Mn)As phase and the equilibrium MnAs second phase. Because of the competing mechanisms, the absolutely highest Curie temperature for the given nominal doping is achieved at intermediate annealing temperature and time. The remaining critical parameter of the synthesis is the epilayer thickness54. For a given nominal doping, the highest attainable TC is reached only in thin films, typically thinner than ~50 nm.
An increase of TC is not the only parameter followed to ascertain that a sample is of high quality. A key characterization tool is the thermodynamic Curie point singularity11. The development of sharply vanishing magnetization M(T) at TC and the onset of the singularity in dρ/dT are well correlated with increasing TC and conductivity within the annealing sequence.
MO experiments
A Ti:sapphire laser was used as a light source. Laser pulses, with the time width of 200 fs and the repetition rate of 82 MHz, were tuned to 1.64 eV, that is, above the semiconductor band gap, to excite magnetization dynamics by photon absorption. A schematic diagram of the experimental set-up is shown in Supplementary Fig. S7. The output of a femtosecond laser is divided into a strong pump pulse and a weak probe pulse that are focused to a same spot on the sample. The pump pulses were usually circularly polarized (with a helicity controlled by a wave plate) and the probe pulses were linearly polarized. The measured MO signals correspond to the probe-polarization rotation induced by the pump pulses. The experiment was performed close to the normal incidence geometry (angle of incidence θi=2° and 8° for pump-and-probe pulses, respectively) with a sample mounted in a cryostat, which was placed between the poles of an electromagnet. All the MO data were measured at temperature of 15 K, at pump excitation intensity 30–40 μJ cm−2, and they correspond to the helicity-independent part of the measured signal40. The external magnetic field Hext was applied in the sample plane at an angle φH with respect to the [100] crystallographic direction in the sample plane (Supplementary Fig. S7). Before all time-resolved experiments, we always prepared the magnetization in a well-defined state by first applying a strong saturating magnetic field at an angle φH and then reducing it to the desired magnitude of Hext. There are several microscopic mechanisms that can lead to a precession of magnetization due to the impact of pump laser pulse. In particular, very recently we reported on the precession of magnetization due to optical spin-transfer torque40 and optical spin-orbit torque59. However, the most common mechanism, which is responsible for the oscillatory MO signals measured in the majority of (Ga,Mn)As samples at low excitation intensities, is the change of the sample magnetic anisotropy due to the pump-induced temperature increase59 that is schematically shown in Supplementary Fig. S8. The most important point from the perspective of the present paper is that the precession of magnetization induced by the laser pulses is determined by the magnetic anisotropy of the sample, which makes this method an all-optical analogue to FMR60 (Supplementary Equations S2–S19).
Determination of micromagnetic parameters
All micromagnetic parameters reported here were deduced from a single MO pump-and-probe experiment. In particular, the anisotropy fields were determined by a fitting of the theoretically derived dependence of the precession frequency on the external magnetic field (Supplementary Equations S13–S15) to the experimentally obtained data (Supplementary Fig. S9). For all the investigated samples, we supplemented this method by two additional experimental techniques that provide information about the samples magnetic anisotropy, namely the probe-polarization dependence of the MO precession signal amplitude (Supplementary Fig. S10) and superconducting quantum interference device magnetometry (Supplementary Fig. S11). This enabled us to increase the precision of the magnetic anisotropy determination (Supplementary Fig. S12) even further. The Gilbert damping constant can be deduced from the precession signal damping using the LLG equation (Supplementary Equations S2–S7, S11 and S16) and the experimentally measured values of MO coefficients of the polar Kerr effect and magnetic liner dichroism (Supplementary Fig. S13); examples of the data are shown in Supplementary Fig. S14. Finally, the spin stiffness is obtained from the mutual spacing of the SWRs (Supplementary Fig. S15), which are present in the measured oscillatory MO signals (Supplementary Fig. S16). The inapplicability of this spin stiffness determination to thick (Ga,Mn)As epilayers (Supplementary Fig. S5) is illustrated in Supplementary Fig. S6.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Nĕmec, P. et al. The essential role of carefully optimized synthesis for elucidating intrinsic material properties of (Ga,Mn)As. Nat. Commun. 4:1422 doi: 10.1038/ncomms2426 (2012).
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge theoretical assistance of Pavel Motloch and support from EU ERC Advanced Grant No. 268066 and FP7-215368 SemiSpinNet, the Ministry of Education of the Czech Republic Grants No. LM2011026, the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic Grant No. 202/09/H041 and P204/12/0853, the Charles University in Prague Grant No. SVV-2012-265306 and 443011, the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Preamium Academiae and US grants ONR-N000141110780, NSF-MRSEC DMR-0820414, NSF-DMR-1105512.
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Sample preparation: V.N., K.O., R.P.C.; experiments and data analysis: N.T., P.N., E.R., D.B., P. M., H.R., V.N., K.O, T.J., B.L.G.; data modelling: P.N., F.T., H.R., K.O., V.N.; theory: T.J., J.S.; writing: T.J., P.N., J.S.; project planning: P.N., V.N., T.J.
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Supplementary Figures S1-S16, Supplementary Notes 1-10 and Supplementary References (PDF 1739 kb)
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Nĕmec, P., Novák, V., Tesařová, N. et al. The essential role of carefully optimized synthesis for elucidating intrinsic material properties of (Ga,Mn)As. Nat Commun 4, 1422 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2426
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2426
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