Electron holography observation of individual ferrimagnetic lattice planes

Nature. 2024 Jul;631(8021):521-525. doi: 10.1038/s41586-024-07673-w. Epub 2024 Jul 3.

Abstract

Atomic-scale observations of a specific local area would be considerably beneficial when exploring new fundamental materials and devices. The development of hardware-type aberration correction1,2 in electron microscopy has enabled local structural observations with atomic resolution3-5 as well as chemical and vibration analysis6-8. In magnetic imaging, however, atomic-level spin configurations are analysed by electron energy-loss spectroscopy by placing samples in strong magnetic fields9-11, which destroy the nature of the magnetic ordering in the samples. Although magnetic-field-free observations can visualize the intrinsic magnetic fields of an antiferromagnet by unit-cell averaging12, directly observing the magnetic field of an individual atomic layer of a non-uniform structure is challenging. Here we report that the magnetic fields of an individual lattice plane inside materials with a non-uniform structure can be observed under magnetic-field-free conditions by electron holography with a hardware-type aberration corrector assisted by post-digital aberration correction. The magnetic phases of the net magnetic moments of (111) lattice planes formed by opposite spin orderings between Fe3+ and Mo5+ in a ferrimagnetic double-perovskite oxide (Ba2FeMoO6) were successfully observed. This result opens the door to direct observations of the magnetic lattice in local areas, such as interfaces and grain boundaries, in many materials and devices.