Electronic, magnetic and spectroscopic properties of manganese nanostructures

Physics

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Scientific paper

This paper presents a review of the electronic, magnetic and spectroscopic properties of manganese (Mn)-based nanostructures. In the last few years a variety of techniques have been used to prepare mesoscopic transition-metal islands and novel effects associated with the electronic structure in nanoscale systems have been reported. Mn in the atomic configuration possesses a moment as high as 5μB so it should be very interesting to dope semiconductors with Mn for spin injection or to use Mn itself for permanent magnets. In this paper the introduction (section 1) focuses mainly on metallic Mn nanostructures which are the core of this review. Nevertheless we try to present a general overview of various kinds of Mn structures as well as several theoretical methods with their own limitations to handle the corresponding problems. More precisely, section 2 outlines a variety of bulk, surface, interface and cluster structures with their resulting magnetism as far as Mn is concerned. Actually, in these past two decades, considerable interest has been devoted to Mn nanostructures deposited on various metallic substrates (section 3). Because of its exotic structural and magnetic properties, Mn is indeed an interesting candidate for ultra-thin film growth as it is expected to accept different local configurations. Experimentally, one may attempt to stabilize normally high-temperature phases of Mn by epitaxial growth on a suitable substrate. Specifically, we shall point out the frequently occurring, important situation of magnetically stabilized surface alloys. Next (section 4) we first focus on spectroscopic properties of Mn compounds as well as Mn adsorbates upon graphite and other substrates both experimentally and theoretically. Moreover, we recall a few remarks about Mn impurities with respect to the Kondo problem and also with respect to semiconductors and spintronics. In the latter field, practical applications actually require room-temperature Mn ferromagnetism which is not that easy to obtain. Finally, in section 5, we point out that a given Mn nanostructure generally exhibits a non-collinear (NCL) structure which is often the most stable one among all the collinear and NCL ones. This fact explains why constrained collinear calculations have often disagreed with the corresponding experimental data. Section 6 is devoted to a short discussion where we recall a few important points that have been developed in this paper.

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