| Literature DB >> 31491273 |
Jiaxin Zhang1, Xiaochan Cai1, Wei Xia1, Aiji Liang1, Junwei Huang2, Chengwei Wang1,3, Lexian Yang4, Hongtao Yuan2, Yulin Chen1,4,5, Shilei Zhang1, Yanfeng Guo1, Zhongkai Liu1, Gang Li1.
Abstract
The recent discovery of intrinsic ferromagnetic order in the atomically thin van der Waals crystal CrXTe_{3} (X=Si, Ge) stimulates intensive studies on the nature of low-dimensional magnetism because the presence of long-range magnetic order in two-dimensional systems with continuous symmetry is strictly prohibited by thermal fluctuations. By combining advanced many-body calculations with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy we investigate CrSiTe_{3} single crystals and unveil the pivotal role played by the strong electronic correlations at both high- and low-temperature regimes. Above the Curie temperature (T_{c}), Coulomb repulsion (U) drives the system into a charge transfer insulating phase. In contrast, below T_{c} the crystal field arranges the Cr-3d orbitals such that the ferromagnetic superexchange profits, giving rise to the bulk ferromagnetic ground state with which the electronic correlations compete. The excellent agreement between theory and experiment establishes CrSiTe_{3} as a prototype low-dimensional crystal with the cooperation and interplay of electronic correlation and ferromagnetism.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31491273 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.047203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161