Date Sep 15, 2021, 12:00 pm – 12:00 pm Location Bowen Hall Auditorium 222 Share on X Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Speaker Jason Kawasaki '09 is an Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Affiliation University of Wisconsin - Madison Presentation Epitaxy, Exfoliation, and Strain-Induced Magnetism in Rippled Heusler Membranes Details Event Description Please join us Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2021, at 12:00 noon in the Bowen Hall Auditorium for the next seminar of the PRISM/PCCM Fall ’21 Seminar Series featuring Prof. Jason Kawasaki of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. A light lunch is provided at 11:30 a.m. in the Bowen Hall Atrium immediately prior to the seminar. Registration is required. You can register using this form here(link is external) Please note: -All attendees must wear face coverings. -Attendees at this event must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. -Ability to social distance may not be possible. A complete listing of the Fall 2021 PRISM/PCCM seminars is available at: materials.princeton.edu(link is external) Abstract: Single-crystalline membranes of functional materials enable the tuning of properties via extreme strain states; however, conventional routes for producing membranes require the use of sacrificial layers and chemical etchants, which can both damage the membrane and limit the ability to make them ultrathin. Here we demonstrate the epitaxial growth of the cubic Heusler compound GdPtSb on graphene-terminated Al2O3 substrates. Despite the presence of the graphene interlayer, the Heusler films have epitaxial registry to the underlying sapphire, as revealed by x-ray diffraction, reflection high energy electron diffraction, and transmission electron microscopy. The weak Van der Waals interactions of graphene enable mechanical exfoliation to yield free-standing GdPtSb membranes, which form ripples when transferred to a flexible polymer handle. Whereas unstrained GdPtSb is antiferromagnetic, measurements on rippled membranes show a spontaneous magnetic moment at room temperature, with a saturation magnetization of 5.2 bohr magneton per Gd. First-principles calculations show that the coupling to homogeneous strain is too small to induce ferromagnetism, suggesting a dominant role for strain gradients. Our membranes provide a novel platform for tuning the magnetic properties of intermetallic compounds via strain (piezomagnetism and magnetostriction) and strain gradients (flexomagnetism). D. Du, et. al., Nature Communications 12, 2494 (2021). Bio: Jason Kawasaki '09 is an Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. His research group focuses on the epitaxial synthesis of magnetic and topological materials, especially Heusler compounds. He received a BSE in Mechanical Engineering with a certificate in Materials Science and Engineering from Princeton (2009) and Ph.D. in Materials from UC Santa Barbara (2014). From 2014-2016 he was a Kavli Postdoctoral Fellow at Cornell University. He began at UW-Madison in 2016. He is the recipient of the NSF CAREER Award, ARO and AFOSR Young Investigator Awards, and a DARPA Young Faculty Award. Sponsors Princeton Center for Complex Materials (PCCM) Princeton Institute for the Science & Tech of Materials (PRISM)