Abstract
Barium hexaferrite (BaM) films with in-plane c-axis orientation are promising and technically important materials for self-biased magnetic microwave devices. In this work, highly oriented BaM films with different thickness and an in-plane easy axis (c-axis) of magnetization were grown on a-plane single-crystal sapphire substrates by direct current magnetron sputtering. A procedure involving seed layers, layer-by-layer annealing was adopted to reduce the substrate-induced strains and allow for the growth of thick (~3.44 μm) films. The epitaxial growth of the BaM film on sapphire was revealed by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy with dislocations being observed at the film-substrate interface. The orientation was also verified by X-ray diffraction and more notably, polarized Raman scattering. The magnetic properties and ferromagnetic resonant frequencies were experimentally characterized by a vibrating sample magnetometry and a frequency-swept ferromagnetic resonant flip-chip technique, respectively. The micron-thick BaM films exhibited a large remanence ratio of 0.92 along in-plane easy axis and a small one of 0.09 for the in-plane hard axis loop measurement. The FMR frequency was 50.3 GHz at zero field and reached 57.9 GHz under a magnetic field of 3 kOe, indicating that the epitaxial BaM films with strong self-biased behaviors have good electromagnetic properties in millimeter-wave range.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
M-type barium hexaferrite BaFe12O19 (BaM) has attracted increasing attention for application in various microwave devices due to its large uniaxial magnetic anisotropy, relatively high permeability, and low conduction losses1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. Hexaferrite films, especially c-axis aligned BaM films, are promising candidates for next-generation miniature planar high-frequency milllimeter wave ferrite devices3,4,6. Out-of-plane c-axis (OCA) oriented BaM films, with the magnetic moments perpendicular to the plane of the substrate, were first prepared in 1981 by M. Naoe et al. to be used as perpendicular magnetic recording media to replace Co-Cr thin films9,10. Up to now, OCA BaM films have been extensively studied and successfully fabricated by different methods, such as molecular beam epitaxy (MBE)11,12, liquid phase epitaxy (LPE)13, alternating target laser ablation deposition (ARLAD)14,15, pulsed laser deposition (PLD)16,17,18, radio frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering19,20,21, spin-coating22,23,24 and so on. Utilizing an external magnetic biasing field to induce the alignment of c-axes of the BaM particles, instead of the epitaxial growth methods mentioned above, has also been adopted and includes screen printing (SP)25,26 and electrophoretic deposition (EPD)27, to name a few. The (0001) textured films, however, usually have small remanent magnetization (Mr) and are hard to be made fully self-biasing due to their large shape-demagnetizing field for this particular geometry28. Self-biasing is an important property that eliminates the need of a large external magnet, which provides the needed biasing field for magnetic microwave devices. This is an essential step in making these devices and related components lighter and smaller5.
In principle, the realization of a high remanence ratio Mr/Ms value for in-plane c-axis oriented (IPCA) BaM films is much easier as compared to the (0001) textured ones, since IPCA films have a near-zero shape-demagnetizing factor in the film plane and self-demagnetization effects are minimized4,28,29,30. Another basic advantage of IPCA BaM films lies in their higher ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) frequency, which reaches ~50 GHz at zero external field, about 45% higher than that of OCA ones29. However, unlike OCA BaM films, which have been fabricated on various substrates, like Al2O3 (0001)16,20,24, MgO (111)31, SiC (0001)12,17,18, Si (111)19, GaN (0001)32 and Gd3Ga5O12 (GGG) (111)13, successful fabrication of the IPCA BaM films has always been a challenge. It was not until the year 1992 that Hlyton et al. reported the c-axis aligned BaM films with in-plane anisotropy for the first time by reactive magnetron sputtering33. Progress for IPCA BaM films has been limited after that, owing to the limited selection of preparation methods and substrates, mainly a- and m-plane sapphire (Al2O3). Some recent successes regarding the fabrication of highly textured IPCA BaM films have been reported using PLD28,34 or a hybrid process that involved PLD and LPE29,30,35,36. LPE remains the primary technique for processing near single-crystal quality BaM films with large thickness (up to 80 μm for IPCA oriented ones) and low microwave loss. The low-loss property, however, comes together with a low coercivity, which typically corresponding to a low remanence ratio4,5,6. In other words, although possessing a very high crystal quality, the IPCA BaM film fabricated by LPE always has a low remanence ratio, which ranges from ~0.84 at 7 μm to ~0.33 at 20 μm, and drops to a near-zero value with even larger thickness29,35,36,37. What’s more, LPE involves a complicated liquid phase control, and requires expensive equipment, which hinders its application in industrial production. The industrial production cost is also very high for PLD technique, whose deposition rate is limited by the laser power. In addition, both LPE and PLD are restricted to relatively small size substrates.
Industrial-scale film processing technique that requires no high-end equipments, e.g., magnetron sputtering, are long known as a crude method for epitaxial growth. Specifically, direct current (DC) magnetron sputtering has long been used to sputter metal materials, while oxide ceramics have always been prepared by RF magnetron sputtering, which is subject to low sputtering rate compared with DC sputtering. In our previous studies, however, well aligned in-plane c-axis oriented BaM thin films (∼120 nm in thickness) were successfully prepared using DC magnetron sputtering38,39. In the present work, using seed layers and a layer-by-layer annealing procedure, we obtained 3.44-μm-thick epitaxially grown BaM films that hold promise for various microwave applications. Furthermore, the microstructure and epitaxial orientation relationship between BaM and sapphire were comprehensively investigated based on transmission electron microscopy (TEM) that has seldom been reported for this system and Raman analysis that is efficient in probing structures and strains in small regions40,41,42,43. Using a flip-chip technique44, the frequency-swept ferromagnetic resonant (FMR) measurements were carried out. The increasing of FMR frequency of the BaM film with increasing external magnetic field was observed, with the FMR frequency at zero field extrapolated to be 50.3 GHz, implying their potential in the millimeter-wave magnetic film device applications.
Results and Discussion
Figure 1 illustrates the XRD patterns of the BaM films with different thickness. All the samples, except the thinnest one, show an obvious in-plane c-axis orientation with two main peaks being indexed to the and planes of BaM. The α-Fe2O3 phase is also detected in the films owing to its higher thermodynamic stability than BaM and tendency of persisting during BaM fabrication38,39,45. Our previous studies have shown that α-Fe2O3 phase plays a significant role in promoting the in-plane c-axis oriented growth of the BaM films on sapphire substrates38,39, and acts as a temporary template during the orientation growth of the BaM crystallites20. Two small peaks corresponding to and crystallographic planes of BaM also appear in the XRD patterns. Both and peaks show an in-plane c-axis orientation of BaM, with their c-axes being parallel to that of the Al2O3 substrate, but with a 30° rotation around c-axis between them. In general, peaks (m-plane) of BaM film would appear on a-cut plane sapphire substrate and peaks (a-plane) of BaM on m-cut sapphire, according to the orientation relationship between BaM and sapphire. It is noticed that there is no obvious shift of the peaks with thickness whose effect will be further clarified by Raman spectra as will be discussed later.
A lattice shrinkage of the films was suggested when comparing the peak positions of and with the powder samples (PDF 39-1433) due to the compressive stress35 that originates from the lattice mismatch between the film and the substrate. This mismatch also leads to difficulty in preparing a film sample thicker than ~250 nm, and this is the reason why the layer-by-layer annealing method was employed to get micron thick BaM films. Inset in Fig. 1(b) shows the rocking curves of the peak of the 3.44-μm-thick BaM film that was measured along two mutually orthogonal directions: Φ = 0° and Φ = 90°. Compared with Φ = 90°, the Φ = 0° peak is noticeably wider, which is caused by the small grain size along c-axis39.
It is also noticed that the effect of thickness is not clearly reflected in the XRD patterns as shown in Fig. 1, so additional characterization is needed to study thickness-induced structural variation. It is known that Raman spectroscopy is much more sensitive for probing such small difference in film thickness, which was used here to further illustrate the orientated growth of BaM films and particularly the influence of thickness. A half-wave plate was employed to modulate the polarization direction of the incident laser as shown in Fig. 2(a), and the geometrical relationship between the film sample and the Raman spectrometer is schematically depicted in Fig. 2(b). In this work, the 3.44-μm-thick sample was held fixed in space and the c-axis of BaM film was aligned perpendicular to the direction of the incident laser. Raman spectra were measured at different θ vaules, and all Raman scattering bands shown in Fig. 2(c) were attributed to the characteristic peaks of BaM40. Specifically, the bands at about 460 and 515 cm−1 were indexed to A1g and E2g vibrations, respectively40,42. It is found that the peak intensity of A1g reaches its zenith at θ = 0°, while E2g at θ = 90°. In other words, when , the electric field vector of the incident laser, aligns parallel to c-axis of BaM, the intensity of A1g peak reaches its maximum value; and when is perpendicular to c-axis, the intensity of E2g reaches its highest value. The sensibility of the intensities of A1g and E2g peaks are consistent with the in-plane anisotropy of the BaM film and in agreement with XRD results.
To quantitatively analyze the Raman intensity in relation to θ, we fitted the two peaks and obtained the integrated intensity after subtracting a linear baseline. The experimentally determined angular dependence of the intensities of A1g and E2g peaks for the 3.44-μm-thick BaM film is presented in Fig. 2(d). We can see that the intensities of both 460 cm−1 and 515 cm−1 peaks vary gradually with a periodicity of π. The monolayer BaM films also show the similar phenomenon, and such behavior in peak intensity is markedly different from XRD, where even a small deviation in orientation can cause diffracted intensities to drop dramatically. Similar phenomenon of the periodically changed Raman peak intensity has never been observed on BaM films with their c-axis randomly distributed in the film plane, even though the XRD patterns also show strong in-plane oriented peak intensities. This part of work will be soon reported. Raman spectra of the BaM films with different thickness in high wavenumber domain are presented in Fig. 2(e). The bands at about 615, 685, and 720 cm−1 are attributed to A1g vibrations at the octahedral (4f2), bipyramidal (2b), and tetrahedral (4f1) polyhedra sites, respectively40,46. The denoted unknown peaks between A1g(4f2) and A1g(2b) are not found in the 3.44-μm-thick BaM films, and probably come from the interface region between BaM thin films and sapphire substrates. Both A1g(4f2) and A1g(2b) (shown in the inset) bands exhibit an obvious redshift with the increasing film thickness, suggesting a release of the strain inside BaM with the increasing film thickness47,48.
Microstructures of the BaM films with different thickness are presented in Fig. 3. All the samples, except the thinnest one, are composed of parallel aligned grains, indicating in-plane orientation of c-axis38,39. The surface morphology of the 45-nm-thick sample, as shown in Fig. 3(a), does not show obvious parallel aligned grains, in accordance with the XRD results in Fig. 1(a). The cross-sectional SEM image of the 225-nm-thick film shown in inset of Fig. 3(e) reveals a clearly layered structure along c-axis. AFM surface image of the 3.44-μm-thick film given in Fig. 3(f) demonstrates a reasonably smooth surface and also some fine lines along the direction perpendicular to c-axis of the BaM film, suggesting good orientation of c-axis of the BaM film30,34.
The epitaxial growth of BaM film (130-nm-thick one as an example) on sapphire was further confirmed by TEM as shown in Fig. 4. The bright field (BF) TEM image shown in Fig. 4(a) exhibits a uniformly grown BaM film on Al2O3, with the grains extending across the full thickness of the film. The high resolution TEM (HRTEM) image in Fig. 4(b) reveals the atomic structure at the interface between BaM and Al2O3 on (0001) planes. Measured lattice distances read 2.38 Å and 2.55 Å for Al2O3 (d11-20) substrate and BaM (d20-20) film, respectively. It gives a misfit parameter of about 7% between the two structures on (0001), the oxygen close-packing planes. The selected area diffraction (SAD) pattern in Fig. 4(c) from the BaM/Al2O3 interface area reveals the orientation character: BaM[0001]//Al2O3[0001] and BaM//Al2O3, and both BaM and sapphire show a 6-fold symmetry. In addition, there exists a 30° rotation around [0001] direction between BaM and sapphire, which is in accordance with the XRD patterns shown in Fig. 1(a). The splitting of the diffraction spots shown in Fig. 4(c) confirms the crystal mismatch between BaM and sapphire seen in Fig. 4(b). To further understand this phenomenon, we use the fast Fourier transform (FFT) to identify the interfacial dislocations in Fig. 4(d) as indicated by the arrows. Unsurprisingly, the dislocations periodically appear at the interface every dozen of lattice fringes, or about every 8 unit cells, indicating a misfit parameter of ~7% between BaM and sapphire in the (0001) planes. The formation of misfit dislocations at the interface by strain relaxation infers the epitaxial growth of the film on substrate49,50,51. The strains initiated at the interface will influence the magnetic properties of the entire film, as will be shown by the following VSM results. Nevertheless, using a layer-by-layer annealing procedure, the stain got considerably relieved by forming new interfaces between each layer, especially for the initially deposited 130-nm-thick seed layer.
Magnetic property measurements of the BaM films with different thickness were conducted along in-plane easy ([0001]) and hard () axes using vibrating sample magnetometry. The magnetic data, including saturation magnetization (Ms), remanent magnetization (Mr), coercivity (Hc) and effective anisotropy field (HA) are listed in Table 1 and illustrated in Fig. 5(a) and Supplementary Information S1. It can be seen that all the BaM films with different thickness exhibit obvious in-plane anisotropy. The Ms value is only 90 emu/cc for the 45-nm-thick film sample due to the existence of the non-magnetic α-Fe2O3 phase33. With the increasing thickness, the amount of α-Fe2O3 phase decreases, and Ms value of BaM increases accordingly as indicated in Fig. 5(b). For the 3.44-μm-thick film sample, where no α-Fe2O3 phase was detected by XRD, Ms is 337 emu/cc and close to (~89%) the value reported for bulk and crystal materials52. The fact that Ms of the 3.44-μm-thick BaM film is not 100% of the theoretical value of BaM (380 emu/cc) was tentatively attributed to Al diffusion from the sapphire substrates, as confirmed by both the TEM-EDS line scan (Supplementary Information S2) and XPS results (Supplementary Information S3). The hysteresis loops along in-plane hard axis are almost linear and closed (coercivity is small) for the 225-nm-thick and 3.44-μm-thick BaM films, indicating that the easy axes are well aligned in the film plane with small c-axis dispersion39,45,53. Nevertheless, the Hc vaule increases rapidly with reducing thickness as shown in Fig. 5(b). It suggests that the strains are initiated at the interface and have an influence on the magnetic properties of the entire film53. In addition, the in-plane c-axis aligned BaM films, only except the 45-nm-thick ones, have large remanent magnetization to saturation magnetization (Mr/Ms) ratio of larger than 0.85 along c-axis as shown in Table 1. This large ratio is comparable with the reported films prepared by radio frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering and pulsed laser deposition (PLD) techniques34,45.
Transmission coefficient S21 for the 3.44-μm-thick BaM film was measured under various DC magnetic field in a broadband frequency-swept FMR spectrometer system, and illustrated in Fig. 5(c). Due to the lower signal level, the FMR spectra for the thinner films were not obtained in our measurement system. Thus, the FMR frequencies were calculated via Kittel equation, and the data are included in Table 1. It can be seen that all films with different thickness, except the 45-nm-thick film, show zero-field FMR frequencies higher than 50 GHz, which can be considered the result of the high in-plane c-axis orientation. The little influence of film thickness on the FMR frequency can be also observed from Table 1 for the films with thickness ranging from 85 nm to 3.44 μm. The relative lower FMR frequency of the 45-nm-thick film may be caused by the poorer orientation as discussed above. From Fig. 5(c), the absorption peaks that positioned downward originate from FMR, while the ones that positioned upward at ~50 GHz are caused by the subtraction of the background at zero fields. This background is composed of two main parts. One is the zero-field FMR response of the 3.44-μm-thick film sample, which was extrapolated to be ~50.3 GHz according to Fig. 5(d). This value is well consistent with the calculated one (50.9 GHz, Table 1) according to Kittel equation. The second part comes from the background loss and noise caused by transmission lines and the fixture, which are also nearly static and can be easily distinguished. The FMR frequency of BaM increases with the increasing magnetic field, and Fig. 5(d) represents a linear dependence of the FMR frequency on the applied magnetic field strength. The full width half maximum (FWHM) linewidth Δƒ is ~2 GHz, using a Lorentzian fit on the data collected at 2.5 kOe, as the green line shows in Fig. 5(c). The more commonly used field linewidth ΔH is calculated to be ~0.78 kOe by dividing Δƒ by γ44, the gyromagnetic ratio, which corresponds to the slope in Fig. 5(d) and is ~2.56 GHz/kOe. The ΔH value is comparative to that micron-thick in-plane c-axis oriented BaM films (~0.2–0.4 kOe) grown by PLD technique30,34. The larger FWHM linewidth of the present films might be caused by the imperfect crystalline quality of the layer-by-layer annealed film samples, which can be improved by further optimization of deposition processing, especially the annealing procedure. Anyway, the above results suggest that the epitaxial BaM film with a relatively large thickness prepared by DC magnetron sputtering is a promising candidate for application in self-biased microwave and millimeter-wave devices.
Conclusion
In-plane c-axis oriented Ba-hexaferrite (BaM) films with different thickness were deposited on a-plane sapphire (Al2O3) substrates using DC magnetron sputtering followed by an ex-situ annealing process. Seed layer and a layer-by-layer annealing procedure were adopted to fabricate micron-thick BaM films, with the seed layer acting as a buffer layer to relieve the strains and induce further orientated growth of the thick film. The epitaxial growth of BaM on sapphire was confirmed by high resolution transmission electron microscopy, polarized Raman spectra, as well as X-ray diffraction results. Dislocations were observed across the film-substrate interface and were expected to relieve the strain inside BaM and facilitate the epitaxial growth of the films. All the BaM films exhibit obvious in-plane uniaxial anisotropy, holding great promise for application in self-biased millimeter-wave devices. The present work should be helpful for preparing highly orientated oxide films and understanding their epitaxial structures as well as the relationship between structure and properties.
Methods
Film Deposition
BaFe12O19 films were grown on polished 5 × 5 mm2 sapphire (Al2O3) substrates using a DC magnetron sputtering technique38,39. The BaM hexagonal structure, with m-plane alignment, grew epitaxially on a-plane of sapphire substrates. The deposition condition included sputtering gases of Ar-7% O2, DC sputtering power of 100 W, and substrate temperature set at room temperature. Different deposition duration time was set as 5, 10, 20, 30, and 40 min to get BaM films with different thickness of about 45, 85, 130, 180, and 225 nm, respectively. The as-deposited amorphous films were subsequently annealed at 850 °C for 30 min in air. It was found that 225 nm was the largest thickness that a monolayer BaM film could reach with a good repeatability. The thickness limit is probably caused by the strains in the film, which mainly come from the large thermal and lattice mismatch between BaM and sapphire29,33,35,53,54. To solve this problem and obtain micron-thick BaM films, a layer-by-layer annealing procedure was adopted, taking the 130-nm-thick film as a seed layer to reduce the strain between film and substrate and induce the orientated growth of the entire micron-thick BaM film as well. In the following 6-layer deposition, the deposition time for each layer was set to 90 min, annealing time 10 min, while the annealing temperature varied for different layers. The first and second layers were annealed at 840 °C, the third and fourth layers at 830 °C, and the fifth and sixth at 820 °C, respectively. The decreasing annealing temperature procedure was designed to prevent excessive grain growth.
Structural Characterization
Phase and crystallographic orientation were studied by θ–2θ X-ray diffraction (XRD) using a Rigaku Smartlab diffractometer (Cu Kα radiation). Surface morphology of the films was observed using scanning electron microscope (SEM; MERLIN VP Compact, Carl Zeiss, Germany) and atomic force microscopy (AFM; SPI 4000, Seiko, Japan). Film thickness was estimated on the cross-sectional microscope sample using SEM. X-ray photoelectron spectra (XPS) were recorded using a Thermo Fisher Escalab 250Xi spectroscopy with Al Kα X-ray source (E = 1486.6 eV). Atomic structure and chemical composition at BaM-sapphire interface were characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) on the FEI Tecnai G2 F20 microscope attached with energy dispersive X-ray spectrometer (EDS). Raman scattering spectra were recorded in a backscattering configuration using a Raman spectrometer (RS; LabRAM HR Evolution, HORIBA Scientific, Japan). A 633 nm laser was used as the excitation source with ~1 mW power incident upon the surface of BaM film.
Static Magnetic and Microwave Properties Measurements
Static magnetic measurements were performed at room temperature using a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID-VSM, Quantum Design, USA), with the magnetic hysteresis loops measured along the in-plane easy and hard axes to a maximum field of 3 Tesla. Microwave property measurements were carried out using a broadband frequency-swept FMR spectrometer with a flip-chip configuration44,55, in which the BaM film was positioned face-down on a coplanar waveguide. The transmission responses of the coplanar waveguide were detected using a vector network analyzer (VNA) Agilent E8361 C at varied direct current (DC) magnetic field, with the in-plane easy axis (c-axis) of the film sample applied parallel to the applied DC magnetic field. The transmission coefficient S21 was measured at a constant field with the background subtraction positioned off without an applied magnetic field. This test method was adopted to obtain high-quality data for ferromagnetic resonant (FMR) frequency and minimize interference from other sources of absorption.
FMR frequency calculation from Kittle equation
The FMR frequency at zero field shown in Table 1 was calculated using Kittel equation56,57.
where H is the applied magnetic field, and γ is the gyromagnetic ratio, which can be set as 2.8 MHz/Oe29, while the values of effective anisotropy field HA and saturation introduction 4πMs are taken from Table 1.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Zhang, X. et al. Epitaxially grown BaM hexaferrite films having uniaxial axis in the film plane for self-biased devices. Sci. Rep. 7, 44193; doi: 10.1038/srep44193 (2017).
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
References
Pullar, R. C. Hexagonal ferrites: A review of the synthesis, properties and applications of hexaferrite ceramics. Prog. Mater Sci. 57, 1191–1334 (2012).
Özgür, Ü., Alivov, Y. & Morkoç, H. Microwave ferrites, part 1: fundamental properties. J. Mater. Sci.: Mater. Electron. 20, 789–834 (2009).
Adam, J. D., Davis, L. E., Dionne, G. F., Schloemann, E. F. & Stitzer, S. N. Ferrite devices and materials. IEEE Trans . Microwave Theory Tech. 50, 721–737 (2002).
Harris, V. G. Modern microwave ferrites. IEEE Trans. Magn. 48, 1075–1104 (2012).
Harris, V. G. et al. Ba-hexaferrite films for next generation microwave devices. J. Appl. Phys. 99, 08M911 (2006).
Harris, V. G. et al. Recent advances in processing and applications of microwave ferrites. J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 321, 2035–2047 (2009).
Su, Z., Bennett, S., Hu, B., Chen, Y. & Harris, V. G. Magnetic and microwave properties of U-type hexaferrite films with high remanence and low ferromagnetic resonance linewidth. J. Appl. Phys. 115, 17A504 (2014).
Liu, J., Zeng, Y., Guo, C., Zhang, W. & Yang, X. One-step synthesis of barium hexaferrite nano-powders via microwave-assisted sol–gel auto-combustion. J. Eur. Ceram. Soc. 30, 993–997 (2010).
Naoe, M., Hasunuma, S., Hoshi, Y. & Yamanaka, S. Preparation of barium ferrite films with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy by DC sputtering. IEEE Trans. Magn. 17, 3184–3186 (1981).
Matsuoka, M., Naoe, M. & Hoshi, Y. Ba–ferrite thin‐film disk for perpendicular magnetic recording. J. Appl. Phys. 57, 4040–4042 (1985).
Liu, H. et al. Epitaxial relationship of MBE grown barium hexaferrite (0001) films on sapphire (0001). J. Cryst. Growth 312, 671–675 (2010).
Ohodnicki, P. R. et al. Correlation between texture, anisotropy, and vector magnetization processes investigated by two-dimensional vector vibrating sample magnetometry in BaO(Fe2O3)6 thin film. J. Appl. Phys. 103, 07E514 (2008).
Yoon, S. D. & Vittoria, C. Thick M-type barium hexaferrite films grown on garnet substrates. J. Appl. Phys. 96, 2131–2135 (2004).
Geiler, A. L. et al. Atomic scale design and control of cation distribution in hexagonal ferrites. Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 067201 (2008).
Mohebbi, M., Ebnabbasi, K. & Vittoria, C. In-situ deposition of c-axis oriented barium ferrite films for microwave applications. IEEE Trans. Magn. 49, 4207–4209 (2013).
Carosella, C. A. et al. Pulsed laser deposition of epitaxial BaFe12O19 thin films. J. Appl. Phys. 71, 5107–5110 (1992).
Chen, Z. et al. Growth of Ba-hexaferrite films on single crystal 6-H SiC. J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 301, 166–170 (2006).
Cai, Z., Chen, Z., Goodrich, T. L., Harris, V. G. & Ziemer, K. S. Chemical and structural characterization of barium hexaferrite films deposited on 6H-SiC with and without MgO/BaM interwoven layers. J. Cryst. Growth 307, 321–327 (2007).
Zhang, L., Su, X. D., Chen, Y., Li, Q. F. & Harris, V. G. Radio-frequency magnetron sputter-deposited barium hexaferrite films on Pt-coated Si substrates suitable for microwave applications. Scripta Mater. 63, 492–495 (2010).
Cho, T. S., Je, J. H. & Noh, D. Y. Formation of crystalline Ba-ferrite phase from α-Fe2O3 phase in amorphous precursor. Appl. Phys. Lett. 76, 303–305 (2000).
Gee, S. H., Hong, Y. K., Erickson, D. W., Tanaka, T. & Park, M. H. Ex situ annealing method for c-axis oriented barium ferrite thick films. J. Appl. Phys. 93, 7507–7509 (2003).
Meng, S., Yue, Z., Zhang, X. & Li, L. Quasi-epitaxial barium hexaferrite thin films prepared by a topotactic reactive diffusion process. Appl. Surf. Sci. 290, 340–345 (2014).
Harward, I. et al. Physical properties of Al doped Ba hexagonal ferrite thin films. J. Appl. Phys. 113, 043903 (2013).
Meng, S., Yue, Z. & Li, L. Effect of ethylene glycol on the orientation and magnetic properties of barium ferrite thin films derived by chemical solution deposition. J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 354, 290–294 (2014).
Chen, Y. et al. Oriented barium hexaferrite thick films with narrow ferromagnetic resonance linewidth. Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 062516 (2006).
Chen, Y. et al. Screen printed thick self-biased, low-loss, barium hexaferrite films by hot-press sintering. J. Appl. Phys. 100, 43907 (2006).
Lisjak, D. & Ovtar, S. The alignment of barium ferrite nanoparticles from their suspensions in electric and magnetic fields. J. Phys. Chem. B 117, 1644–1650 (2013).
Yoon, S. D., Vittoria, C. & Oliver, S. A. Magnetization behavior of scandium-substituted barium hexaferrite films having uniaxial axis in the film plane. J. Magn. Magn. Mater. 265, 130–137 (2003).
Song, Y.-Y., Das, J., Wang, Z., Tong, W. & Patton, C. E. In-plane c-axis oriented barium ferrite films with self-bias and low microwave loss. Appl. Phys. Lett. 93, 172503 (2008).
Song, Y.-Y., Sun, Y., Lu, L., Bevivino, J. & Wu, M. Self-biased planar millimeter wave notch filters based on magnetostatic wave excitation in barium hexagonal ferrite thin films. Appl. Phys. Lett. 97, 173502 (2010).
Hu, B. et al. Magnetocrystalline anisotropy and FMR linewidth of Zr and Zn-doped Ba-hexaferrite films grown on MgO (111). IEEE Trans. Magn. 49, 4234–4237 (2013).
Ohodnicki, P. R. et al. Magnetic anisotropy and crystalline texture in BaO(Fe2O3)6 thin films deposited on GaN∕Al2O3 . J. Appl. Phys. 101, 09M521 (2007).
Hylton, T. L., Parker, M. A. & Howard, J. K. Preparation and magnetic properties of epitaxial barium ferrite thin films on sapphire with in-plane, uniaxial anisotropy. Appl. Phys. Lett. 61, 867–869 (1992).
Li, P. et al. Generation of pure spin currents via spin Seebeck effect in self-biased hexagonal ferrite thin films. Appl. Phys. Lett. 105, 242412 (2014).
Yoon, S. D. & Vittoria, C. Microwave and magnetic properties of barium hexaferrite films having the c-axis in the film plane by liquid phase epitaxy technique. J. Appl. Phys. 93, 8597–8599 (2003).
Wise, A. T. et al. M-type barium hexaferrite synthesis and characterization for phase shifter applications. J. Appl. Phys. 109, 07E535 (2011)
Yoon, S. D. & Vittoria, C. Preparation of high-quality hexaferrite thick films by an improved liquid phase epitaxy deposition technique. IEEE Trans. Magn. 39, 3163–3165 (2003).
Zhang, X., Yue, Z., Meng, S. & Yuan, L. Magnetic properties of in-plane oriented barium hexaferrite thin films prepared by direct current magnetron sputtering. J. Appl. Phys. 116, 243909 (2014).
Zhang, X., Yue, Z. & Li, L. Orientation growth and magnetic properties of BaM hexaferrite films deposited by direct current magnetron sputtering. J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 99, 860–865 (2016).
Kreisel, J., Lucazeau, G. & Vincent, H. Raman spectra and vibrational analysis of BaFe12O19 hexagonal ferrite. J. Solid State Chem. 137, 127–137 (1998).
Kreisel, J., Pignard, S., Vincent, H., Sénateur, J. P. & Lucazeau, G. . Raman study of BaFe12O19 thin films. Appl. Phys. Lett. 73, 1194–1196 (1998).
Kreisel, J., Lucazeau, G. & Vincent, H. Raman study of substituted barium ferrite single crystals, BaFe12-2xMexCoxO19 (Me=Ir, Ti). J. Raman Spectrosc. 30, 115–120 (1999).
El Marssi, M., Le Marrec, F., Lukyanchuk, I. A. & Karkut, M. G. Ferroelectric transition in an epitaxial barium titanate thin film: Raman spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction study. J. Appl. Phys. 94, 3307–3312 (2003).
Harward, I., O’Keevan, T., Hutchison, A., Zagorodnii, V. & Celinski, Z. A broadband ferromagnetic resonance Ssectrometer to measure thin films up to 70 GHz. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 82, 095115 (2011).
Meng, S., Yue, Z. & Li, L. In-plane c-axis oriented barium hexaferrite films prepared by magnetron sputtering. Mater. Lett. 86, 92–95 (2012).
Hien, N. T. M., Han, K., Chen, X.-B., Sur, J. C. & Yang, I.-S. Raman scattering studies of spin-waves in hexagonal BaFe12O19 . J. Raman Spectrosc. 43, 2020–2024 (2012).
Davydov, V. Y. et al. Raman and photoluminescence studies of biaxial strain in GaN epitaxial layers grown on 6H–SiC. J. Appl. Phys. 82, 5097–5102 (1997).
Chen, H. et al. Crosshatching on a SiGe film grown on a Si(001) substrate studied by Raman mapping and atomic force microscopy. Phys. Rev. B: Condens. Matter Mater. Phys. 65, 233303 (2002).
Vasu, K., Sreedhara, M. B., Ghatak, J. & Rao, C. N. Atomic layer deposition of p-type epitaxial thin films of undoped and N-doped anatase TiO2 . ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 8, 7897–7901 (2016).
Narayan, J. & Larson, B. C. Domain epitaxy: A unified paradigm for thin film growth. J. Appl. Phys. 93, 278–285 (2003).
Akbashev, A. R., Plokhikh, A. V., Barbash, D., Lofland, S. E. & Spanier, J. E. Crystallization engineering as a route to epitaxial strain control. APL Materials 3, 106102 (2015).
Smit, J. & Wijn, H. P. J. Ferrites: Physical Properties of Ferrimagnetic Oxides in Relation to Their Technical Applications. (Wiley, 1959).
Shinde, S. R. et al. Effect of lattice mismatch strains on the structural and magnetic properties of barium ferrite films. Appl. Phys. Lett. 72, 3443–3445 (1998).
Dorsey, P. C. et al. Coefficients of thermal expansion for barium hexaferrite. J. Appl. Phys. 79, 3517–3520 (1996).
Yuan, L., Yue, Z., Meng, S. & Li, L. High-frequency ferromagnetic resonance of Co nanowire arrays. Phys. Status Solidi A 211, 1828–1833 (2014).
Kittel, C. On the theory of ferromagnetic resonance absorption. Phys. Rev. 73, 155–161 (1948).
Vittoria, C. Magnetics, Dielectrics, and Wave Propagation with MATLAB® Codes. (CRC Press, 2011).
Acknowledgements
This work was financially supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant Nos 51272125 and 51221291.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
X.Z. led and was involved in all aspects of the project, S.M. developed the broadband FMR system, D.S. analyzed the TEM results, Y.Z. performed the FMR measurements, and V.H. improved the manuscript. Z.Y. were in charge and advised on all parts of the project.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Zhang, X., Meng, S., Song, D. et al. Epitaxially grown BaM hexaferrite films having uniaxial axis in the film plane for self-biased devices. Sci Rep 7, 44193 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44193
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44193
This article is cited by
-
Effect of the laser fluence on the microstructure and the relating magnetic properties of BaFe12O19 films grown on YSZ(111) by PLD for optimized perpendicular recording
Journal of Materials Science (2023)
-
Effects of Crystal Structure, Morphology and Ion Diffusion During Annealing on Magnetic Properties of Hexagonal Barium Ferrite Films
Journal of Electronic Materials (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.