A three-stage magnetic phase transition revealed in ultrahigh-quality van der Waals bulk magnet CrSBr

POSTER

Abstract

van der Waals (vdW) magnets are receiving ever-growing attention nowadays due to their significance in both fundamental researches on low-dimensional magnetism and potential applications in spintronic devices. The high crystalline quality of vdW magnets is the key to maintaining intrinsic magnetic and electronic properties, especially when exfoliated down to the two-dimensional (2D) limit. Here, ultrahigh-quality air-stable vdW CrSBr crystals are synthesized using the direct solid-vapor synthesis method. The high single crystallinity and spatial homogeneity have been thoroughly evidenced at length scale from sub-mm to atomic resolution by X-ray diffraction, second harmonic generation, and scanning transmission electron microscopy. More importantly, specific heat measurements of ultrahigh-quality CrSBr crystals show three thermodynamic anomalies at 185K, 156K, and 132K, revealing a stage-by-stage development of the magnetic order upon cooling, which is also corroborated with the magnetization and transport results. Our ultrahigh-quality CrSBr can further be exfoliated down to monolayers and bilayers easily, providing the building blocks of heterostructures for spintronic and magneto-optoelectronic applications.

*Work conducted at the University of Texas at Dallas was supported by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research grant no. FA9550-19-1-0037. and NSF-DMREF-192158Work conducted at the University of Michigan was supported by NSF CAREER grant no. DMR-174774, AFOSR YIP grant no. FA9550-21-1-0065, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, ARO grant no. W911NF-22-1- 0056 and the W. M. Keck Foundation.

Publication: Liu, Wenhao, et al. "A Three-Stage Magnetic Phase Transition Revealed in Ultrahigh-Quality van der Waals Bulk Magnet CrSBr." ACS nano (2022). doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c02896

Presenters

  • Wenhao Liu

    • University of Texas at Dallas

Authors

  • Wenhao Liu

    • University of Texas at Dallas
  • Xiaoyu Guo

    • University of Michigan
  • Jonathan Schwartz

    • University of Michigan
  • Robert Hovden

    • University of Michigan
  • Liuyan Zhao

    • University of Michigan
  • Bing Lv

    • University of Texas at Dallas