English

Controlling magnetism in 2D CrI3 by electrostatic doping

Materials Science 2018-08-01 v1

Abstract

The atomic thickness of two-dimensional (2D) materials provides a unique opportunity to control material properties and engineer new functionalities by electrostatic doping. Electrostatic doping has been demonstrated to tune the electrical and optical properties of 2D materials in a wide range, as well as to drive the electronic phase transitions. The recent discovery of atomically thin magnetic insulators has opened up the prospect of electrical control of magnetism and new devices with unprecedented performance. Here we demonstrate control of the magnetic properties of monolayer and bilayer CrI3 by electrostatic doping using a dual-gate field-effect device structure. In monolayer CrI3, doping significantly modifies the saturation magnetization, coercive force and Curie temperature, showing strengthened (weakened) magnetic order with hole (electron) doping. Remarkably, in bilayer CrI3 doping drastically changes the interlayer magnetic order, causing a transition from an antiferromagnetic ground state in the pristine form to a ferromagnetic ground state above a critical electron density. The result reveals a strongly doping-dependent interlayer exchange coupling, which enables robust switching of magnetization in bilayer CrI3 by small gate voltages.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1802.07355,
  title  = {Controlling magnetism in 2D CrI3 by electrostatic doping},
  author = {Shengwei Jiang and Lizhong Li and Zefang Wang and Kin Fai Mak and Jie Shan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1802.07355},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

12 pages and 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T00:28:16.362Z