2D magnets have emerged as a class of materials highly promising for studies of quantum phenomena and applications in ultra-compact spintronics. Current research aims at design of 2D magnets with particular functional properties. A formidable challenge is to produce metallic monolayers: the material landscape of layered magnetic systems is strongly dominated by insulators; rare metallic magnets, such as FeGeTe, become insulating as they approach the monolayer limit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ability of light to manipulate fundamental interactions in a medium is central to research in optomagnetism and applications in electronics. A prospective approach is to create composite quasiparticles, magnetic polarons, highly susceptible to external stimuli. To control magnetic and transport properties by weak magnetic and electric fields, it is important to find materials that support photoinduced magnetic polarons with colossal net magnetic moments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF2D magnets are expected to give new insights into the fundamentals of magnetism, host novel quantum phases, and foster development of ultra-compact spintronics. However, the scarcity of 2D magnets often makes a bottleneck in the research efforts, prompting the search for new magnetic systems and synthetic routes. Here, an unconventional approach is adopted to the problem, graphenization - stabilization of layered honeycomb materials in the 2D limit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLayered magnets are stand-out materials because of their range of functional properties that can be controlled by external stimuli. Regretfully, the class of such compounds is rather narrow, prompting the search for new members. Graphitization─stabilization of layered graphitic structures in the 2D limit─is being discussed for cubic materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntrinsic 2D magnets have recently been established as a playground for studies on fundamentals of magnetism, quantum phases, and spintronic applications. The inherent instability at low dimensionality often results in coexistence and/or competition of different magnetic orders. Such instability of magnetic ordering may manifest itself as phase-separated states.
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