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Study of Magnetic Structure and Magnetic Fluctuations in Cr4.74Te8 Single Crystals

ORAL

Abstract

There is extraordinary interest in developing metallic 2D van der Waals materials that exhibit ferromagnetism (FM) with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Cr4.74Te8 is one such system whose structure consists of layers of CrTe2 with extra Cr intercalated between them and it exhibits FM below Tc=160K. CrTe2 itself is known to be a strong ferromagnet up to room temperature [1]. Adding the intercalated Cr introduces additional magnetic interactions between the van der Waals layers. Recently it was reported that Cr4.74Te8 exhibits a large (10%) negative magneto-resistance effect above Tc, over a temperature range of 30K [2]. Neutron diffraction measurements performed on the CORELLI instrument at the Spallation Neutron Source reveal the presence of a modulated short-range magnetic phase with a wave vector perpendicular to the van der Waals layers and a period that is commensurate with three times the c-axis length. The existence of this modulated phase appears over the same 30K temperature range that is observed in the magneto-transport measurements. The results will be discussed in terms of the magnetic coupling that is introduced from the intercalated Cr layers.

Publication: [1] Room-temperature intrinsic ferromagnetism in epitaxial CrTe2 ultrathin films X. Zhang et al., Nature Communications 12:2492 (2021)<br><br>[2] Self-Intercalation Tunable Interlayer Exchange Coupling in a Synthetic Van der Waals Antiferromagnet X. Zhang et al., Advanced Functional Materials 2202977 (2022)

Presenters

  • Mitchel Vaninger

    University of Missouri

Authors

  • Mitchel Vaninger

    University of Missouri

  • Feng Ye

    Oak Ridge National Lab, SNS, ORNL

  • Xiaoqian Zhang

    University of Missouri

  • Guang Bian

    University of Missouri

  • Thomas W Heitmann

    University of Missouri, Missouri University Research Reactor

  • Alessandro R Mazza

    Oak Ridge National Lab, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Lab

  • Paul F Miceli

    University of Missouri