Parasitic Ferromagnetism in Few-Layered Transition-Metal Chalcogenophosphate.

J Am Chem Soc

Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, CAS Center for Excellence in Nanoscience, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230026, P. R. China.

Published: June 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The emergence of 2D semiconductors presents opportunities for spintronics, which utilizes spin instead of charge for electronics, but the scarcity of tunable magnetic interactions in these materials has hindered progress.
  • Transition metal phosphates, particularly the antiferromagnetic chalcogenophosphate MnPS, have shown promise due to their intrinsic magnetic properties, raising interest in their application in spintronics.
  • Researchers successfully induced parasitic ferromagnetism in few-layered MnPS by exfoliating it, demonstrating that the material's magnetic properties can be tuned through electron redistribution, paving the way for enhanced spintronic applications.

Article Abstract

Since the rise of two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors, it seems that electronic devices will soon be upgraded with spintronics, in which the manipulation of spin degree of freedom endows it obvious advantages over conventional charge-based electronics. However, as the most crucial prerequisite for the above-mentioned expectation, 2D semiconductors with adjustable magnetic interaction are still rare, which has greatly hampered the promotion of spintronics. Recently, transition metal phosphates have attracted tremendous interest due to their intrinsic antiferromagnetism and potential applications in spintronics. In the work described herein, parasitic ferromagnetism is achieved for the first time by exfoliating an antiferromagnetic chalcogenophosphate to a few layers. Taking the transition metal chalcogenophosphate MnPS as an example, the antiferromagnetic transition at the Néel temperature is completely suppressed, and the magnetic behaviors of the as-obtained few-layered MnPS are dominated by parasitic ferromagnetism. We experimentally verify an electron redistribution by which part of the Mn 3d electrons migrate and redistribute on P atoms in few-layered MnPS due to the introduced Mn vacancies. The results demonstrated here broaden the tunability of the material's magnetic properties and open up a new strategy to rationally design the magnetic behaviors of 2D semiconductors, which could accelerate the applications of spintronics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c04101DOI Listing

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