Abstract

Spin-related effects discovered in ultrathin magnetic films generally have an interfacial nature. The quality of interfaces between a heavy metal and a ferromagnet is the main driver of surface anisotropy, antisymmetric exchange, chiral damping, spin Hall effect, and spin–orbit torques. To understand the physics and usage of these phenomena for future atomic-scale devices, one has to study systems with disordered interfaces and search there for novel practically desirable effects, which lie beyond the atomic order and surface flatness. Here, we report the interface-related effects in Ru/Co/W/Ru ultrathin films treated by thermal annealing in vacuum. The surface roughness and degree of atomic intermixing at Ru/Co and Co/W interfaces change with increasing annealing temperature up to 240 °C, promoting an enhancement of perpendicular magnetic anisotropy and the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya interaction (i-DMI). Further annealing at higher temperatures brings the interface deterioration and, consequently, a drastic degradation of the magnetic properties. Our first-principles calculations qualitatively support the experimental findings, providing an understanding of the i-DMI enhancement nature.

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