Magnetic nanostructures of two different metals are deposited within nanostructured silicon to control the magnetic switching behavior of the silicon/metal nanocomposite. Two different templates, porous silicon and porous silicon nanotubes are utilized to achieve such nanocomposites. The morphology (pore diameter, tube diameter) of the two systems is comparable. In the case of the utilization of porous silicon templates a mesoporous morphology with average pore diameters of 50 nm is used and these oriented and separated pores are filled with two different metals, namely Ni and Co. The two metals are deposited alternatingly by electrodeposition. A further approach is the chemical growth of Co nanoparticles within porous silicon nanotubes (SiNTs) and the additional deposition of a Ni layer on the outer surface of the tubes. The inner diameter of the silicon tubes is around 50 nm and the wall thickness is about 10 nm. Since the silicon wall of the tubes offers a porous structure the Co particles, which are localized near the pore surface on the wall of a given nanotube, can touch the Ni layer. An alternative structure involves the deposition of an additional Si layer (after the growth of Co particles inside the tubes) as a spacer before the Ni deposition.
The morphology of the deposited bi-metal Ni/Co structures is figured out by SEM and EDX.
In the presented work the dependence of the magnetic properties of a nanostructured silicon/bi-metal nanocomposite on the volume ratio of the metals, on the proximity of the nanostructures and also on the size of the metal deposits has been figured out. If the distance between the deposited bi-metal structures is small enough magnetic exchange coupling between them is present which could be observed. By tuning the bi-metal deposition an optimized energy product is achieved which gives rise to self-assembled nanocomposite systems containing permanent nanomagnets and arrays of them, respectively for on-chip applications.