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Voltage-induced ferromagnetism in diamagnetic FeS<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Increasingly impressive demonstrations of voltage-controlled magnetism have been achieved recently, highlighting potential for low-power data processing and storage. Magnetoionic approaches appear particularly promising, electrolytes and ionic conductors being shown capable of on/off control of ferromagnetism and tuning of magnetic anisotropy. A clear limitation, however, is that such devices either electrically tune a known ferromagnet, or electrically induce ferromagnetism from another magnetic state, e.g., antiferromagnetic. Here, we provide proof-of-principle that ferromagnetism can be voltage-induced even from a diamagnetic, i.e., zero-spin state, suggesting that useful magnetic phases could be electrically-induced in “non-magnetic” materials [1]. We use ionic-liquid-gated diamagnetic FeS2 as a model system, showing that as little as 1 V induces a reversible insulator-metal transition, driven by electrostatic surface inversion. Anomalous Hall measurements then reveal the onset of electrically-tunable surface ferromagnetism at up to 25 K. Density-functional-theory-based modelling explains this in terms of Stoner ferromagnetism induced via filling of a narrow eg band.
[1] Walter et al., Science Advances 6, eabb7721 (2020)

Presenters

  • Chris Leighton

    University of Minnesota, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota

Authors

  • Jeff Walter

    Augsburg University, Department of Physics, Augsburg University

  • Bryan Voigt

    University of Minnesota

  • Ezra Day-Roberts

    Physics, University of Minnesota, University of Minnesota

  • Kei Heltemes

    Augsburg University

  • Rafael Fernandes

    University of Minnesota, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota, Physics, University of Minnesota, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 55455 MN, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

  • Turan Birol

    University of Minnesota, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Physics, University of Minnesota, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota

  • Chris Leighton

    University of Minnesota, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota