Real-space visualization of temperature- and layer-dependent susceptibility in the layered antiferromagnet CrSBr

ORAL

Abstract

Layered magnetic materials have recently garnered substantial interest as platforms for realizing tunable magnetic devices and studying fundamental two-dimensional (2D) magnetic properties. A growing body of research on chromium-based van der Waals (vdW) materials demonstrates the existence magnetism in 2D films down to single atomic layers. Among these, CrSBr has emerged as an air-stable layered antiferromagnetic (AFM) semiconductor with a high transition temperature (TN ≈ 132 K) and gate-tunable magnetic ordering. However, the direct real-space visualization and temperature evolution of magnetic domains in CrSBr remains unexplored, and requires a sensitive local probe. To achieve this, we conducted a variable-temperature magnetic force microscopy (MFM) study under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions, revealing incipient magnetism well above TN associated with the onset of in-plane magnetic correlations which eventually give way to layer-dependent magnetization in the low-temperature AFM phase (T < TN). In addition, we observe temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility and switching with a high degree of spatial inhomogeneity arising, in part, from the parity of the underlying layer number.

*Research at Columbia was supported as part of the Energy Frontier Research Center on Programmable Quantum Materials funded by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES), under award no. DE-SC0019443.

Presenters

  • Daniel J Rizzo

    • Columbia University

Authors

  • Daniel J Rizzo

    • Columbia University
  • Alexander S McLeod

    • Columbia Univ
    • Columbia University
  • Caitlin Carnahan

    • Carnegie Mellon University
    • Carnegie Mellon Univ
  • Avalon H Dismukes

    • Columbia University
  • Ren A Wiscons

    • Amherst College
  • Evan J Telford

    • Columbia University
    • Columbia Univ
  • Yinan Dong

    • Columbia University
  • Abhay N Pasupathy

    • Columbia University
    • Brookhaven National Laboratory & Columbia University
  • Xavier Roy

    • Columbia University
  • Di Xiao

    • University of Washington
    • Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
    • University of Washington, Seattle
  • Dmitri N Basov

    • Columbia University