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Designing magnetic properties in CrSBr through hydrostatic pressure and ligand substitution

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to control magnetic material properties is crucial for fundamental research and underpins many information technologies. Two-dimensional materials are a particularly exciting platform due to their high degree of tunability and ease of implementation into nanoscale devices. Here we report two approaches for manipulating the A-type antiferromagnetic properties of the layered semiconductor CrSBr through hydrostatic pressure and ligand substitution. Hydrostatic pressure compresses the unit cell, continuously decreasing the Néel temperature and increasing all saturation fields. Ligand substitution, realized synthetically through Cl alloying, decreases the Néel temperature and all saturation fields, and also decreases the magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy. A detailed structural analysis combined with first-principles calculations reveal alterations in magnetic properties are intricately related to changes in Cr-Cr distances and the Cr-halogen superexchange pathway. Our work demonstrates opportunities for pre- and post-synthetic design of magnetism in this class of ternary layered magnetic semiconductors and suggests routes for enhancing magnetic order.

Presenters

  • Evan J Telford

    Columbia University

Authors

  • Evan J Telford

    Columbia University

  • Daniel G Chica

    Columbia University

  • Kaichen Xie

    University of Washington

  • Nick Manganaro

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Chun-Ying Huang

    Columbia University

  • Jordan Cox

    Columbia University

  • Avalon H Dismukes

    Columbia University

  • Xiaoyang Zhu

    Columbia University, Department of Chemistry, Columbia 424 University, New York, New York 10027, United States

  • James P Walsh

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Ting Cao

    University of Washington, Department of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Washington

  • Cory R Dean

    Columbia Univ, Columbia University

  • Michael E Ziebel

    Columbia University

  • Xavier Roy

    Columbia University