Ever since the ground-breaking isolation of graphene, numerous two-dimensional (2D) materials have emerged with 2D metal dihalides gaining significant attention due to their intriguing electrical and magnetic properties. In this study, we introduce an innovative approach anhydrous solvent-induced recrystallization of bulk powders to obtain crystals of metal dihalides (MX, with M = Cu, Ni, Co and X = Br, Cl, I), which can be exfoliated to 2D flakes. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method using CuBr as an example, which forms large layered crystals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe study the room-temperature electrical control of charge and spin transport in high-quality bilayer graphene, fully encapsulated with hBN and contacted via 1D spin injectors. We show that spin transport in this device architecture is measurable at room temperature and its spin transport parameters can be modulated by opening of a band gap via a perpendicular displacement field. The modulation of the spin current is dominated by the control of the spin relaxation time with displacement field, demonstrating the basic operation of a spin-based field-effect transistor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpintronics involves the development of low-dimensional electronic systems with potential use in quantum-based computation. In graphene, there has been significant progress in improving spin transport characteristics by encapsulation and reducing impurities, but the influence of standard two-dimensional (2D) tunnel contacts, via pinholes and doping of the graphene channel, remains difficult to eliminate. Here, we report the observation of spin injection and tunable spin signal in fully encapsulated graphene, enabled by van der Waals heterostructures with one-dimensional (1D) contacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigher-order exchange interactions and quantum effects are widely known to play an important role in describing the properties of low-dimensional magnetic compounds. Here, the recently discovered 2D van der Waals (vdW) CrI is identified as a quantum non-Heisenberg material with properties far beyond an Ising magnet as initially assumed. It is found that biquadratic exchange interactions are essential to quantitatively describe the magnetism of CrI but quantum rescaling corrections are required to reproduce its thermal properties.
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