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Hall micromagnetometry of two-dimensional ferromagnets

ORAL

Abstract

The recent advent of atomically-thin ferromagnetic crystals has allowed experimental studies of two-dimensional (2D) magnetism that not only exhibits novel behavior due to the reduced dimensionality but also often serves as a starting point for understanding of the magnetic properties of bulk materials. However, the experimental techniques that were used to explore two-dimensional ferromagnetism could not probe the magnetic field directly. Here we show that ballistic Hall micromagnetometry provides a reliable and convenient way to measure magnetization of individual two-dimensional ferromagnets. Our devices are made by van der Waals assembly in such a way that the investigated ferromagnetic crystal is placed on top of a multiterminal Hall bar made from encapsulated graphene. We apply the micromagnetometry to study atomically-thin chromium tribromide (CrBr3). The material remains ferromagnetic down to monolayer thickness and exhibits strong out-of-plane anisotropy. Magnetic response of CrBr3 varies little with the number of layers and its temperature dependence cannot be described by the simple Ising model of two-dimensional ferromagnetism.

M. Kim et al., Micromagnetometry of two-dimensional ferromagnets. Nat. Electron. 2, 457-463 (2019)

Presenters

  • Minsoo Kim

    Univ of Manchester

Authors

  • Minsoo Kim

    Univ of Manchester

  • Piranavan Kumaravadivel

    Univ of Manchester

  • John Birkbeck

    School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, University of Manchester, School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester, Manchester M139PL, United Kingdom, Univ of Manchester

  • Wenjun Kuang

    Physics, University of Manchester, Univ of Manchester

  • Shuigang Xu

    Univ of Manchester

  • David Hopkinson

    Univ of Manchester

  • Johannes Knolle

    Physics, Technical University of Munich, Technical University Munich, Department of Physics, Technical University of Munich, Imperial College London

  • Paul A McClarty

    Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems

  • Alexey Berdyugin

    Univ of Manchester

  • Moshe Ben Shalom

    Univ of Manchester

  • Roman Gorbachev

    Univ of Manchester, University of Manchester

  • Sarah Haigh

    Univ of Manchester

  • Song Liu

    Columbia Univ, Department of Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Columbia University, Kansas State University

  • James H. Edgar

    Kansas state university, Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Department of Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Tim Taylor Department of Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Kansas State University

  • Konstantin S Novoselov

    Univ of Manchester, School of Physics &Astronomy, University of Manchester

  • Irina Grigorieva

    Univ of Manchester, Physics, University of Manchester

  • Andre Geim

    School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester, University of Manchester, School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester, Manchester M139PL, United Kingdom, Univ of Manchester