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Designing Magnetic Properties in CrSBr through Hydrostatic Pressure and Ligand Substitution

Evan J. Telford, Daniel G. Chica, Michael E. Ziebel, Kaichen Xie, Nicholas S. Manganaro, Chun‐Ying Huang, Jordan M. Cox, Avalon H. Dismukes, Xiaoyang Zhu, James P. S. Walsh, Ting Cao, Cory R. Dean, Xavier Roy

2023Advanced Physics Research28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Magnetic van der Waals (vdW) materials are a promising platform for producing atomically thin spintronic and optoelectronic devices. The A‐type antiferromagnet CrSBr has emerged as a particularly exciting material due to its high magnetic ordering temperature, semiconducting electrical properties, and enhanced chemical stability compared to other vdW magnets. Exploring mechanisms to tune its magnetic properties will facilitate the development of nanoscale devices based on vdW materials with designer magnetic properties. Here it is investigated how the magnetic properties of CrSBr change under pressure and ligand substitution. Pressure compresses the unit cell, increasing the interlayer exchange energy while lowering the Néel temperature. Ligand substitution, realized synthetically through Cl alloying, anisotropically compresses the unit cell and suppresses the Cr‐halogen covalency, reducing the magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy and decreasing the Néel temperature. A detailed structural analysis combined with first‐principles calculations reveals that alterations in the magnetic properties are intricately related to changes in direct Cr–Cr exchange interactions and the Cr–anion superexchange pathways. Further, it is demonstrated that Cl alloying enables chemical tuning of the interlayer coupling from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic, which is unique among known two‐dimensional magnets.

Topics & Concepts

SuperexchangeAntiferromagnetismMagnetocrystalline anisotropySpintronicsFerromagnetismMaterials scienceHydrostatic pressurevan der Waals forceMagnetic anisotropyCondensed matter physicsChemical physicsMagnetNanotechnologyChemistryMagnetizationMagnetic fieldThermodynamicsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsMoleculeOrganic chemistry2D Materials and ApplicationsMXene and MAX Phase MaterialsHeusler alloys: electronic and magnetic properties