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Surface oxidation and magnetic instability of two-dimensional chromium tellurides

ORAL

Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) chromium tellurides (Cr1+δTe2) have recently attracted growing interest owing to their versatile magnetic and electronic properties, including high-temperature perpendicular ferromagnetism, topologically nontrivial spin textures, and a large anomalous Hall effect, which offer great opportunities for 2D spintronic applications. To realize practical applications, one must also consider the stability of the 2D materials. While most 2D ferromagnets discovered thus far do not show robust stability in ambient conditions, various Cr1+δTe2 compounds have been reported to be air-stable, despite the known sensitivity of tellurides in air. In this work, we have performed detailed and systematic studies on the stability of a representative Cr1+δTe2 phase (Cr2Te3), where we evidenced its rapid oxidation in an ambient environment via dramatic changes in Raman vibrational modes, growth of oxides in X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy studies, as well as significant reductions of magnetization over time. Density functional theory calculations suggest that the surface oxidation of chromium tellurides is thermodynamically favorable.

Presenters

  • Amanda L Coughlin

    Indiana University Bloomington

Authors

  • Amanda L Coughlin

    Indiana University Bloomington

  • Sammy Bourji

    University of Houston

  • Junjie Zhang

    Rice University

  • Bingqiang Wei

    University of Nebraska, Lincoln

  • Gaihua Ye

    Texas Tech University

  • Zhipeng Ye

    Texas Tech University, Texas Tech Univ

  • Jeonghoon Hong

    Indiana University Bloomington

  • Boris I Yakobson

    Rice University

  • Rui He

    Texas Tech University

  • Jian Wang

    University of Nebraska, Lincoln

  • Yaroslav Losovyj

    Indiana University, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

  • Liangzi Deng

    University of Houston, Department of Physics and Texas Center for Superconductivity, University of Houston

  • Ching-Wu W Chu

    University of Houston, Department of Physics and Texas Center for Superconductivity, University of Houston

  • Shixiong Zhang

    Indiana University Bloomington