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Observation of stacking engineered magnetic phase transitions within moiré supercells of twisted van der Waals magnets

ORAL

Abstract

Twist engineering of magnetic van der Waals (vdW) moiré superlattices provides an attractive way to achieve nanoscale control over the spin degree of freedom on two-dimensional flatland. Despite the very recent demonstration of moiré magnetism featuring exotic spin order, a comprehensive understanding of the microscopic magnetic interactions, spin dynamics, and magnetic phase transitions within and across individual magnetic moiré supercells remains elusive. Taking advantage of a scanning single-spin microscopy platform, here we report observation of two distinct magnetic phase transitions with separate critical temperatures within moiré supercells of small-angle twisted trilayer chromium triiodide CrI3. By measuring temperature dependent spin fluctuations at the coexisting ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic phases, we explicitly show that the Curie temperature of the ferromagnetic state in twisted CrI3 is higher than the Néel temperature of the antiferromagnetic one by ~10 K. Our mean-field calculations attribute such a spatial and thermodynamic phase separation to stacking order modulated interlayer exchange coupling at the twisted interface of the moiré superlattices. The presented results highlight twist engineering as a promising tuning knob to realize on-demand control of not only the nanoscale spin order of moiré quantum matter but also its dynamic magnetic responses, which may find relevant applications for designing transformative vdW magnetic devices.

Publication: Li, S., Sun, Z., McLaughlin, N.J. et al. Observation of stacking engineered magnetic phase transitions within moiré supercells of twisted van der Waals magnets. Nat Commun 15, 5712 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49942-2

Presenters

  • Senlei Li

    Georgia Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Senlei Li

    Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Zeliang Sun

    University of Michigan

  • Nathan James McLaughlin

    University of California, San Diego

  • Afsana Sharmin

    Colorado State University

  • Nishkarsh Agarwal

    University of Michigan

  • Mengqi Huang

    Geoergia Institute of Technology, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Suk Hyun Sung

    University of Michigan

  • Hanyi Lu

    University of California, San Diego

  • Shaohua Yan

    Renmin University of China

  • Hechang Lei

    Renmin University of China, Department of Physics and Beijing Key Laboratory of Opto-electronic Functional Materials & Micronano Devices, Renmin University of China, Beijing 100872, China

  • Robert Hovden

    University of Michigan

  • Hailong Wang

    Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Hua Chen

    Colorado State University

  • Liuyan Zhao

    University of Michigan

  • Chunhui Rita Du

    Georgia Institute of Technology