| Literature DB >> 29967458 |
Zhi Wang1,2, Tongyao Zhang3,4, Mei Ding5, Baojuan Dong1,2, Yanxu Li3,4, Maolin Chen1,2, Xiaoxi Li1,2, Jianqi Huang1,2, Hanwen Wang1,2, Xiaotian Zhao1,2, Yong Li1,2, Da Li1,2, Chuankun Jia5, Lidong Sun6, Huaihong Guo7, Yu Ye8,9, Dongming Sun1,2, Yuansen Chen10,11, Teng Yang12,13, Jing Zhang3,4, Shimpei Ono14, Zheng Han15,16, Zhidong Zhang1,2.
Abstract
Manipulating a quantum state via electrostatic gating has been of great importance for many model systems in nanoelectronics. Until now, however, controlling the electron spins or, more specifically, the magnetism of a system by electric-field tuning has proven challenging1-4. Recently, atomically thin magnetic semiconductors have attracted significant attention due to their emerging new physical phenomena5-13. However, many issues are yet to be resolved to convincingly demonstrate gate-controllable magnetism in these two-dimensional materials. Here, we show that, via electrostatic gating, a strong field effect can be observed in devices based on few-layered ferromagnetic semiconducting Cr2Ge2Te6. At different gate doping, micro-area Kerr measurements in the studied devices demonstrate bipolar tunable magnetization loops below the Curie temperature, which is tentatively attributed to the moment rebalance in the spin-polarized band structure. Our findings of electric-field-controlled magnetism in van der Waals magnets show possibilities for potential applications in new-generation magnetic memory storage, sensors and spintronics.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29967458 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-018-0186-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213