Abstract

Ultrathin Fe films were epitaxially grown at room temperature on GaAs(001) with either predominant (4×2) or (2×6) surface reconstruction. At nominal Fe coverages of tFe⩾2.8 monolayers (ML), a ferromagnetic state is observed below a certain critical temperature, TC. Surprisingly, the magnetic phase transition at TC appears even sharper than for Fe films on metallic single-crystal substrates, which were believed to be an excellent representation of two-dimensional (2D) ferromagnets. This may be due to the extremely short lateral length scale of film inhomogeneities. The critical exponent β=0.26 is close to the value expected for 2D XY systems of finite size. For tFe=3.6 ML, TC is close to room temperature. TC decreases steeply with decreasing Fe coverage, with an average slope of 270 K/ML. From a power law extrapolation, TC seems to vanish at tFe=2.5 ML. The onset of ferromagnetism at tFe=2.5 ML is interpreted as a percolation phenomenon during the coalescence process of Fe islands.

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