Abstract

In a Fe/(Cd,Mg)Te/CdTe quantum well hybrid structure, short-range and long-range ferromagnetic proximity effects are found to coexist. The former is observed for conduction band electrons, while the latter is observed for holes bound to shallow acceptors in the CdTe quantum well. These effects arise from the interaction of charge carriers confined in the quantum well with different ferromagnets, where electrons interact with the Fe film and holes with an interfacial ferromagnet at the Fe/(Cd,Mg)Te interface. The two proximity effects originate from fundamentally different physical mechanisms. The short-range proximity effect for electrons is determined by the overlap of their wave functions with d-electrons of the Fe film. On the contrary, the long-range effect for holes bound to acceptors is not associated with overlapping wave functions and can be mediated by elliptically polarized phonons. The coexistence of the two ferromagnetic proximity effects reveals the presence of a nontrivial spin texture within the same heterostructure.

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