Local and long-range realizations of a spin-reorientation surface phase transition
Abstract
The spin reorientation transition of an ultrathin film from perpendicular to
in-plane magnetization is driven by a competition between dipole and anisotropy
energies. \textit{In situ} measurements of the magnetic susceptibility of Fe/2
ML Ni/W(110) films as a function of Fe coverage, made as the films are
deposited at constant temperature, show two clear peaks; one at the long-range
and one at the local realization of the transition. In the long-range
realization, the susceptibility probes the striped domain pattern that is
formed in response to the balance of energetics on a mesoscopic scale. Here the
reorientation transition occurs at a non-integer layer thickness. In the local
realization, the susceptibility probes the response of small islands with
in-plane anisotropy in the 3rd atomic Fe layer that are grown on the 2nd atomic
Fe layer, which has perpendicular anisotropy. It is a response to the local
finite-size, metastable energetics due to discrete steps in thickness. An
excellent quantitative description of the susceptibility data is obtained when
both local and long-range aspects of the spin reorientation transition are
included.