Atomic-level details of dopant distributions can significantly influence the material properties. Using scanning tunneling microscopy, we investigate the distribution of substitutional dopants in nitrogen-doped graphene with regard to sublattice occupancy within the honeycomb structure. Samples prepared by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) using pyridine on copper exhibit well-segregated domains of nitrogen dopants in the same sublattice, extending beyond 100 nm. On the other hand, samples prepared by postsynthesis doping of pristine graphene exhibit a random distribution between sublattices. On the basis of theoretical calculations, we attribute the formation of sublattice domains to the preferential attachment of nitrogen to the edge sites of graphene during the CVD growth process. The breaking of sublattice symmetry in doped graphene can have important implications in its electronic applications, such as the opening of a tunable band gap in the material.
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Sci Rep
October 2024
Laboratory for Pohang Emergent Materials and Max Planck POSTECH Center for Complex Phase Materials, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Pohang, 37673, South Korea.
Structural chirality and magnetism, when intertwined, can have profound implications on materials properties. Using X-ray imaging and spectroscopic measurements that leverage the natural and magnetic circular dichroic effects present in magnetized chiral crystal structures, we probe the interplay between chirality and magnetism across the field-induced spin-flop transition of Dy ferroborate, ( ) . Deconvolution of natural and magnetic circular dichroic signals at the Fe K and Dy L absorption edges of the non-centrosymmetric structure was enabled by use of tunable temperature and magnetic field, providing access to element-specific magnetic information across the spin-flop transition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
July 2024
Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research, Heisenbergstraße 1, Stuttgart 70569, Germany.
The realization of above room-temperature ferromagnetism in the two-dimensional (2D) magnet FeGeTe represents a major advance for the use of van der Waals (vdW) materials in practical spintronic applications. In particular, observations of magnetic skyrmions and related states within exfoliated flakes of this material provide a pathway to the fine-tuning of topological spin textures via 2D material heterostructure engineering. However, there are conflicting reports as to the nature of the magnetic structures in FeGeTe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Mater
April 2024
School of Physics, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
The primordial ingredient of cuprate superconductivity is the CuO unit cell. Theories usually concentrate on the intra-atom Coulombic interactions dominating the 3d and 3d configurations of each copper ion. However, if Coulombic interactions also occur between electrons of the 2p orbitals of each planar oxygen atom, spontaneous orbital ordering may split their energy levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano Lett
February 2024
Instituto de Ciencias Físicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 62210 Cuernavaca, México.
We demonstrate that the current flow in graphene can be guided on atomically thin current pathways by the engineering of Kekulé-O distortions. A grain boundary in these distortions separates the system into topologically distinct regions and induces a ballistic domain-wall state. The state is independent of the orientation of the grain boundary with respect to the graphene sublattice and permits guiding the current on arbitrary paths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
November 2023
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, United States.
Nanoscale ferroelectric 2D materials offer the opportunity to investigate curvature and strain effects on materials functionalities. Among these, CuInPS (CIPS) has attracted tremendous research interest in recent years due to combination of room temperature ferroelectricity, scalability to a few layers thickness, and ferrielectric properties due to coexistence of 2 polar sublattices. Here, we explore the local curvature and strain effect on polarization in CIPS via piezoresponse force microscopy and spectroscopy.
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