Main

Superconductivity and magnetic order are in general mutually exclusive phenomena. Nonetheless, the coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity has been suggested for finite-momentum pairing states5,6. Coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity has been reported in a few three-dimensional superconducting systems7,8,9, such as RuSr2GdCu2O8 and UGe2. The question remains if such coexistence can occur in a two-dimensional electronic system. An intriguing candidate is the interface between the two band insulators LaAlO3 (LAO) and SrTiO3 (STO). At their n-type interface a conducting two-dimensional electron liquid is generated. Moreover, the LAO/STO interface was also reported to have a two-dimensional superconducting ground state3.

For this system, magnetic ordering was suggested in ref. 4, the authors of which deduced the presence of magnetic scattering centres from the temperature dependence of the interface resistance R and a hysteresis of R during the sweep of magnetic field H. Different magnetotransport studies indicate an antiferromagnetic order10 or a non-uniform field-induced magnetization and strong magnetic anisotropy11. Recently, it was found that, at both chemically treated STO bulk and LAO/STO interfaces, charges are electronically phase separated into regions containing a quasi-two-dimensional electron-gas phase, a ferromagnetic phase persisting above room temperature or a diamagnetic/paramagnetic phase12 below 60 K. On the theoretical side, electronic-structure calculations yield complicated pictures for the magnetism at the interface layers13,14,15,16. Specifically, the calculations do not support magnetically ordered moments at the interface of an LAO/STO bilayer covered by vacuum17. Consequently, any observed magnetism must originate from strong electronic correlations.

Coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity has not been reported at the LAO/STO interfaces. The ground state was found to be controlled by growth conditions, carrier concentration18 and external magnetic field19. These experimental observations based on transport properties suggest that the two phenomena do not coexist (see, for example, Fig. 16 of ref. 18).

To clarify this issue, we have grown LAO/STO interfaces, measured their superconducting properties by transport measurements and then applied cantilever-based torque magnetometry as an extremely sensitive and direct method to measure a possible magnetic moment m of the sample.

Torque magnetometry directly determines m by measuring the torque of the sample mounted on a cantilever in an external magnetic field H. As the torque is given by , the method detects the component of m oriented perpendicular to B, the magnetic field flux density. Owing to its great sensitivity, this method has been applied to determine the magnetic susceptibility of very small samples, to analyse tiny magnetic signals and, in some cases, even to accurately map Fermi surfaces20,21,22.

Our set-up measured τ, the component of along the rotation axis of a 25-μm- or 50-μm-thick cantilever, with the sample glued to the cantilever tip. H was applied at a tilt angle φ with respect to the c axis (perpendicular to the interface). The cantilever deflection was detected capacitively. The moment m is given by m=τ/(μ0H sinθ), where μ0is the vacuum permeability and θ is the angle between m and H (with m in plane, θ=90°−φ; see the discussion below). We used the measured angular dependence of the zero-field capacitance of the cantilever set-up to calibrate the spring constant of the cantilever. Knowing the spring constant, we quantitatively determine the value of m. The cantilever set-up can resolve changes22 in m of δm=10−13–10−12A m2 at 10 T.

All samples investigated were grown using nominally identical parameters for the substrate preparation and the pulsed laser deposition. The films were patterned with Nb Ohmic contacts using photolithography and painted with silver paste on the back. The only intended difference between the samples is that for one reference sample (named the ‘0 u.c.’ sample) a shutter in front of the substrate was used to block the growth of LAO (Fig. 1a). The resistance of the interface samples was measured using the Nb Ohmic contacts. The LAO/STO interfaces were found to be superconducting below 120 mK. The superconducting temperature is slightly lower than that of many other LAO/STO samples grown in the same conditions, which might be the result of unintended variations of growth parameters.

Figure 1: Torque magnetometry of LAO/STO oxide interface.
figure 1

a, A schematic representation of an interface sample (sample 1) and of a 0 u.c. background sample (sample 2), which were grown in the same conditions. b, The field dependence of the torque curves of various test samples (cantilever only, bare STO substrate and the 0 u.c. sample) and a interface sample, taken at T=300 mK and tilt angle φ15°. Inset: A schematic representation of the cantilever set-up. c, In sample 1, the field dependence of the torque curve is linear and symmetric below 0.5 T. d, In sample 1, the magnetic moment m jumps to a finite value within milliteslas near zero field.

An example of the τH dependence is shown as the red curve in Fig. 1b for a 5 u.c. sample. The torque signal has a pronounced reversible curve with a sharp ‘cusp’ at low field. This cusp is displayed clearly by Fig. 1c, which zooms into this cusp. Figure 1d shows m determined from the τH curve at −2 T≤μ0H≤2 T. The V shape of the τH curve centred at H=0 yields a non-zero, H-independent m for μ0H up to 0.5 T. Close to H=0, m jumps to 5×10−10 A m2, corresponding to 0.30.4 μB per interface unit cell (assuming that the signal is generated by the STO unit cell next to the interface, see below). The values of m very close to zero field (|μ0H|≤5 mT) are hard to determine, because the small H causes a large relative noise in m. At |μ0H|=5 mT, δm4×10−10 A m2, which is close to the magnitude of m. Starting at fields of order 1 T, m diminishes gradually at higher H, suggesting that an extra contribution appears in high fields. This high-field contribution was found to vary among different runs. Below we focus on the low-field behaviour.

To explore whether the torque signals originate from the LAO/STO interface, we carried out control experiments using reference samples. Sizable torque signals were only observed from samples containing LAO/STO interfaces, the torque of which exceeds that of all background samples by two orders of magnitude (Fig. 1b). In particular, the superconducting Nb Ohmic contacts are unlikely to be the source of the torque signal, as the torque is found far above the upper critical field of Nb (0.4 T for bulk or 2 T for thin films at 0 K). Moreover, all background m will be oriented closely parallel to H, thus creating small torque responses only. The background m is also proportional to H, as these materials are paramagnetic or diamagnetic. Furthermore, we measured a 5-u.c.-thick LAO film grown on an LAO substrate. The torque signal is again two orders of magnitude smaller than that of the 5 u.c. LAO/STO sample, excluding the possible contribution from defects in the LAO film (see the Supplementary Information). We therefore conclude that the observed large torque indeed arises from the presence of the LAO/STO interface.

A chief motivation for our study was to determine whether the superconductivity and magnetic order appear simultaneously or exist as separate phases in the temperature TH phase diagram. We observe that below the superconducting transition temperature Tc, the magnetic ordering signal and the superconducting state coexist. For the sample of Fig. 2, for example, the superconducting transition occurs at 120 mK at H=0, with a resistance foot extending to 25 mK. The RH curves measured at 20 mK with H parallel and perpendicular to the interface plane are plotted in Fig. 2b. While the interface is superconducting, the mH curve at 20 mK displays the same jump at small fields (Fig. 2c) as observed at higher temperatures (Fig. 1d). Notably, a finite m is recorded at μ0H5 mT, whereas the sample resistance R does not reach the normal-state value until μ0H20 mT. The magnetic ordering signal and the superconducting state are therefore found to coexist.

Figure 2: Coexistence of superconductivity and magnetic ordering in a 5 u.c. LAO/STO interface sample.
figure 2

a, The T dependence of the resistance R shows a superconducting transition at Tc=120 mK. b, H dependence of R in different field directions taken at T=20 mK. c, H dependence of m measured at T=20 mK at tilt angle φ15° away from the c axis. The RH curve is also plotted with H parallel to the c axis.

The magnetic ordering signal is robust at elevated temperatures. For the 5 u.c. LAO/STO sample, m does not show significant temperature dependence even up to 40 K (Fig. 3), the highest T at which this sample was investigated. In another 5 u.c. LAO/STO sample, m was found to be non-zero up to 200 K (see the Supplementary Information). Such T dependence is consistent with previous results12 reporting the existence of an ordering state at room temperature. The high magnetic ordering temperature indicates a strong magnetic exchange coupling.

Figure 3: Magnetic ordering persisting to elevated temperature.
figure 3

a, Torque versus H curves of the 5 u.c. LAO/STO sample measured at selected T between 300 mK and 40 K. Within the measurement noise, no strong temperature dependence is observed. The tilt angle is about 49°. b, The curves of m versus H calculated from the torque curves.

The magnetic-field dependence of m can be described by the Langevin function characteristic for superparamagnetism, where spins are aligned in small-size domains to behave as large classical magnetic moments23. However, superparamagnetic samples usually show a strong temperature dependence in the low-field mH curves, a feature missing from the mH curves in Fig. 3. Noise in our measurements of m at fields close to zero may obscure this feature. Because m saturates at about 30 mT at T up to at least 40 K, the lower bound of the collective classical moment is around 103μB. On the other hand, the mH curves are also consistent with a very soft ferromagnet whose hysteresis loop is hidden by the m noise at |μ0H|<5 mT. Although these two possibilities cannot be distinguished by our data, both of them suggest a strong ferromagnetic-like magnetic coupling within domains.

To determine the orientation of the magnetic moment, we made a series of torque measurements in which the sample tilt angle was varied (see the inset of Fig. 1b). Because , where is the component of H perpendicular to m, the orientation of the moments can be discerned by tracking the angular dependence of the torque signal. In a highly anisotropic system, m is determined by H, the field component parallel to m. Thus if His large enough to saturate m, τ will increase as a sine function of the angle between H and m. On the other hand, once H is insufficient to saturate m, τ will stop following the sine behaviour.

The angle dependence shows that the saturation magnetic moment stays in the plane of the interface. We carried out low-field torque measurements at 300 mK at 30 different tilt angles. Figure 4 shows the τH curves at several selected angles φ. As shown in Fig. 4a, as φ changes from 15° to 94°, τ decreases monotonically and slowly approaches zero at φ90°, where H is almost parallel to m. On the other hand, as φ varies between +15° and −10°, H is almost perpendicular to m. H decreases and eventually changes to the opposite direction. The in-plane magnetic moment drops to zero once His close to zero. As a result, the τ(H) curves swing from a positive saturation at φ15°to a negative saturation at φ−10°.

Figure 4: Angular dependence of the interface torque indicating an in-plane saturation magnetic moment.
figure 4

a,b, At T=300 mK, the magnetic torque of the 5 u.c. LAO/STO sample is measured at various tilt angles φ between 15° and 94° (a) and between −10° and 15° (b). The inset of b shows the geometry of the field H and magnetization M, and the definition of the tilt angle φ.

Our data show that two-dimensional superconductivity and magnetic order coexist at n-type LAO/STO interfaces. The results leave open the question of whether the same electrons are generating the superconducting and the magnetic order. The measured results can be accounted for by scenarios of spatial phase separation, in which inhomogeneous magnetic and superconducting electron layers are generated either in different lateral puddles, or at different depths from the interface. One possible cause of such inhomogeneities is a non-uniform distribution of possible oxygen vacancies in the STO. This notion is in accord with a proposal that the oxygen vacancies in the interfacial TiO2 layers stabilize ferromagnetic-type order of the Ti ions close to the interface, as supported by density functional theory calculations24. In this scenario the superconducting phase is in close contact with the ferromagnetic phase, so the superconducting phase is affected by the ferromagnetism. Furthermore, the data are also consistent with the idea that the same electron system forms a magnetically ordered, superconducting electron liquid.

We note that, after our submission of the manuscript25, two experiments were reported to support the coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism at the LAO/STO interface, based on hysteretic magnetoresistance26,27 and scanning superconducting quantum interference device imaging28.

In conclusion, using torque magnetometry we have made quantitative measurements of the magnetic moment of LAO/STO interfaces in a wide range of magnetic field and temperature, directly showing the presence of magnetic order in the two-dimensional electron liquid of LAO/STO interfaces. The order is characterized by a superparamagnetic-like behaviour, with saturation magnetic moments of 0.3 μB per interface unit cell oriented in plane, persisting beyond 200 K. Below 120 mK, the ferromagnetic-like magnetic order and the two-dimensional superconductivity coexist.

Methods

The LAO/STO heterostructures were grown at the University of Augsburg using pulsed-laser deposition with in situ monitoring of the LAO layer thickness by reflection high-energy electron diffraction. The single-crystalline STO substrates were TiO2 terminated. Their lateral size was 5×5 mm2 and their thickness was 1 mm. The LAO layers were grown at an oxygen pressure of 8×10−5 mbar at 780 °C to a thickness of 5 u.c with a subsequent cooldown to 300 K in 0.5 bar of oxygen. The sputtered Ohmic Nb contacts filled holes patterned by etching with an Ar ion beam. The reference (0 u.c.) samples were grown in the same conditions (oxygen pressure of 8×10−5 mbar at 780 °C).

The magnetization measurements were made with a home-built cantilever-based torque magnetometry apparatus at MIT. Cantilevers are made from thin gold or brass foils. We deposit gold film on a sapphire and put it under the cantilever. The torque is tracked by measuring the capacitance between the cantilever and the gold film, using a GR1615 capacitance bridge or an AH2700A capacitance bridge. To calibrate the spring constant of the cantilever, we rotate the cantilever set-up under zero magnetic field to measure the capacitance change caused by the weight of the sample wafer.