A. Gupta, R. Gross, et al.
SPIE Advances in Semiconductors and Superconductors 1990
The effective anisotropy fields, (Formula presented), of Fe films of 2 to 15 monolayers thick grown on Cu(001) were measured at 100 K for two growth conditions; 100 K growth with a room temperature anneal and room-temperature growth. First-order anisotropy constants, (Formula presented) and (Formula presented), are derived for the thickness independent anisotropy energy term and the thickness dependent anisotropy energy term, respectively. For 100 K growth, (Formula presented) for the glide-distorted fcc Fe film is two orders of magnitude larger than for the bcc Fe film and >30 times larger than for bulk bcc Fe. The fcc film has (Formula presented) ergs/(Formula presented), compared to 0.94 ergs/(Formula presented) for the bcc Fe film. The perpendicular easy axis in the glide-distorted fcc Fe, for either growth temperature, is observed only because both (Formula presented) and (Formula presented) result in large perpendicular anisotropy energies. A conversion to an in-plane easy axis occurs as the thickness dependent anisotropy energy decreases with increasing Fe thickness in the bcc phase and is not directly a result of the phase transformation to bcc Fe. Room-temperature growth gives similar anisotropy constants. © 1996 The American Physical Society.
A. Gupta, R. Gross, et al.
SPIE Advances in Semiconductors and Superconductors 1990
Thomas E. Karis, C. Mark Seymour, et al.
Rheologica Acta
J. Tersoff
Applied Surface Science
R.J. Gambino, N.R. Stemple, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids