| Literature DB >> 32338924 |
Yao Wen1, Zhehong Liu2, Yu Zhang1, Congxin Xia3, Baoxing Zhai3, Xinhui Zhang4, Guihao Zhai4, Chao Shen4, Peng He5, Ruiqing Cheng5, Lei Yin5, Yuyu Yao5, Marshet Getaye Sendeku5, Zhenxing Wang5, Xubing Ye2, Chuansheng Liu1, Chao Jiang5, Chongxin Shan6, Youwen Long2,7, Jun He1.
Abstract
The manipulation of magnetism provides a unique opportunity for the development of data storage and spintronic applications. Until now, electrical control, pressure tuning, stacking structure dependence, and nanoscale engineering have been realized. However, as the dimensions are decreased, the decrease of the ferromagnetism phase transition temperature (Tc) is a universal trend in ferromagnets. Here, we make a breakthrough to realize the synthesis of 1 and 2 unit cell (UC) Cr2Te3 and discover a room-temperature ferromagnetism in two-dimensional Cr2Te3. The newly observed Tc increases strongly from 160 K in the thick flake (40.3 nm) to 280 K in 6 UC Cr2Te3 (7.1 nm). The magnetization and anomalous Hall effect measurements provided unambiguous evidence for the existence of spontaneous magnetization at room temperature. The theoretical model revealed that the reconstruction of Cr2Te3 could result in anomalous thickness-dependent Tc. This dimension tuning method opens up a new avenue for manipulation of ferromagnetism.Entities:
Keywords: 1 unit cell; Room-temperature ferromagnetism; anomalous Hall effect; reconstruction
Year: 2020 PMID: 32338924 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b05128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189