Curved Magnetism in CrI<sub>3</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
Strain gradients or curvature are ubiquitous at the nanoscale and can have tremendous effects on material properties. Micromagnetic modeling has shown how curved magnets can exhibit unusually rich phase diagrams, including chiral or topological spin states. This is particularly important in relation to the recent finding of ferromagnetism in 2D monolayers, such as CrI3, given their extreme flexibility and natural tendency to rippling. Nevertheless, a thorough, quantitative, understanding of such effects in real materials, from first principles theory, is challenging and still lacking. Here, we use non-collinear-spin density-functional theory to study the (flexomagnetic) coupling between magnetism and curvature in monolayer CrI3. We find a crossover from a magnetization normal to the surface at small curvatures, to a cycloidal spin state at larger curvatures. We show that this cycloidal state is stabilized by curvature induced, effective anisotropy and Dzyaloshinskii–Moriya type contributions to the magnetic energy. While the latter appears to be dominated by non-relativistic effects, in line with earlier predictions, our results reveal an unexpectedly large impact of spin-orbit coupling on the curvature dependence of the former, qualitatively different from the purely geometric effect discussed in earlier theory.
*The work is supported by the Swedish Research Council (VR). Calculations were done on computer resources at Pirineus, CSUC (RES-FI-2021-1-0034) and from the Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing (SNIC).
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Publication: Curved Magnetism in CrI3, https://arxiv.org/abs/2110.15088
Presenters
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Alexander Edström
- Institut de Ciencia de Materials de Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC)