| Literature DB >> 33881844 |
Meng Huang1, Shanshan Wang2, Zhaohao Wang3, Ping Liu1, Junxiang Xiang1, Chao Feng1, Xiangqi Wang4, Zengming Zhang5, Zhenchao Wen6, Hongjun Xu7, Guoqiang Yu7, Yalin Lu1, Weisheng Zhao3, Shengyuan A Yang8, Dazhi Hou1, Bin Xiang1.
Abstract
van der Waals crystals exhibit excellent material performance when exfoliated to few-atomic-layer thickness. In contrast, the van der Waals thin films more than 10 nm thick are believed to show bulk properties, in which outstanding material performance is rarely found. Here we report the largest anomalous Hall conductivity observed so far in a 170 nm van der Waals ferromagnetic 1T-CrTe2 flake, which reaches 67,000 Ω-1 cm-1. Such a colossal anomalous Hall conductivity in 1T-CrTe2 is dominated by the extrinsic skew scattering process rather than the intrinsic Berry phase effect, as evidenced by the linear relation between the anomalous Hall conductivity and the longitudinal conductivity. Defying the dilemma of mutually exclusive large anomalous Hall angle and high electric conductivity for most ferromagnets, 1T-CrTe2 achieves both in a thin film sample. Considering the shared physics of the anomalous Hall effect and the spin Hall effect, our finding offers a guideline for searching large spin Hall materials of high conductivity which may overcome the bottleneck of overheating in spintronics devices.Entities:
Keywords: colossal anomalous Hall effect; ferromagnetic metal; large electric conductivity; skew scattering; van der Waals crystal
Year: 2021 PMID: 33881844 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c00488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881