posted on 2023-05-31, 21:03authored byMarzieh Savadkoohi, Daniel Gopman, Pius Suh, Carlos Rojas-Dotti, José Martínez-Lillo, Pawan Tyagi
The
single-molecule magnet (SMM) is demonstrated here to transform
conventional magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs), a memory device used
in present-day computers, into solar cells. For the first time, we
demonstrated an electronic spin-dependent solar cell effect on an
SMM-transformed MTJ under illumination from unpolarized white light.
We patterned cross-junction-shaped devices to form a CoFeB/MgO/CoFeB-based
MTJ. The MgO barrier thickness at the intersection between the two
exposed junction edges was less than the SMM extent, which enabled
the SMM molecules to serve as channels to conduct spin-dependent transport.
The SMM channels yielded a region of long-range magnetic ordering
around these engineered molecular junctions. Our SMM possessed a hexanuclear
[Mn6(μ3-O)2(H2N-sao)6(6-atha)2(EtOH)6] [H2N-saoH
= salicylamidoxime, 6-atha = 6-acetylthiohexanoate] complex and thioesters
end groups to form bonds with metal films. SMM-doped MTJs were shown
to exhibit a solar cell effect and yielded ≈80 mV open-circuit
voltage and ≈10 mA/cm2 saturation current density
under illumination from one sun equivalent radiation dose. A room-temperature
Kelvin Probe AFM (KPAFM) study provided direct evidence that the SMM
transformed the electronic properties of the MTJ’s electrodes
over a lateral area in excess of several thousand times larger in
extent than the area spanned by the molecular junctions themselves.
The decisive factor in observing this spin-photovoltaic effect is
the formation of SMM spin channels between the two different ferromagnetic
electrodes, which in turn is able to catalyze the long-range transformation
in each electrode around the junction area.