扫描隧道显微镜
凝聚态物理
旋转
磁矩
材料科学
费米能级
自旋电子学
锑
化学物理
物理
铁磁性
电子
量子力学
冶金
作者
Limin She,Zhitao Shen,Zhenyang Xie,Limei Wang,Ye-Heng Song,Xuesen Wang,Yu Jia,Zhenyu Zhang,Weifeng Zhang
标识
DOI:10.1103/physrevlett.129.026802
摘要
Magnetic molecules on surfaces have been widely investigated to reveal delicate interfacial couplings and for potential technological applications. In these endeavors, one prevailing challenge is how to preserve or recover the molecular spins, especially on highly metallic substrates that can readily quench the magnetic moments of the admolecules. Here, we use scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy to exploit the semimetallic nature of antimony and observe, surprisingly yet pleasantly, that the spin of Co-phthalocyanine is well preserved on Sb(111), as unambiguously evidenced by the emergent strong Kondo resonance across the molecule. Our first-principles calculations further confirm that the optimal density of states near the Fermi level of the semimetal is a decisive factor, weakening the overall interfacial coupling, while still ensuring sufficiently effective electron-spin scattering in the many-body system. Beyond isolated admolecules, we discover that each of the magnetic moments in a molecular dimer or a densely packed island is distinctly preserved as well, rendering such molecular magnets immense potentials for ultrahigh density memory devices.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI