APS Logo

Symmetry Engineering of van der Waals magnetic VCl<sub>3</sub> monolayer

ORAL

Abstract

The discovery of 2D van der Waals magnetic monolayers attracted tremendous interest due to their stacking-dependent magnetism. Further breaking their spatial symmetry leads to more exotic properties including possible multiferroicity and Morie physics. In this talk, I will introduce our recent progress in symmetry engineering of semiconducting magnetic monolayer VCl3 via the van der Waals interface. Using molecular beam epitaxy, we achieved controllable growth of high-quality monolayer (ML) VCl3 on different van der Waals substrates. We first discuss the ML-VCl3/NbSe2 heterojunction, in which the commensurate NbSe2 substrate breaks both rotational and inversion symmetries of VCl3. Combined with scanning tunneling microscopy, first-principle calculation, and magnetization measurement, we show evidence of coexisting in-plane ferroelectricity and antiferromagnetism in the ML-VCl3. Next, ML-VCl3 on epitaxy graphene/SiC substrate is discussed. We demonstrate the creation of unexpected electronic superlattice potential in ML-VCl3. Substrate SiC reconstruction plays a key role in creating the superlattice, which induces a periodic strain and therefore breaks the translation symmetry in ML-VCl3. Our work shows V-based trihalides as a promising platform for realizing both multiferroic order and Morie-related correlation phenomena.

Presenters

  • Jinghao Deng

    Lab of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell

Authors

  • Jinghao Deng

    Lab of Atomic and Solid State Physics, Cornell

  • Deping Guo

    Renmin University of China

  • Yao Wen

    Wuhan University

  • Shuangzan Lu

    Wuhan University

  • Hui Zhang

    Wuhan University

  • Zhengbo Cheng

    Wuhan University

  • Zemin Pan

    Wuhan University

  • Tao Jian

    Wuhan University

  • Dongyu Li

    Wuhan University

  • Hao Wang

    Wuhan University

  • Yusong Bai

    Wuhan University

  • Zhilin Li

    Institute of physics,chinese academy of sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China

  • Wei Ji

    Renmin University of China

  • Jun He

    Wuhan University

  • Chendong Zhang

    Wuhan University