Gate-tuning of magnetism in a van der Waals magnetic semimetal Cr3Te4
ORAL
Abstract
The concept of a gate-induced modulation of a quantum state of matter has become more and more popular since the beginning of this century. In particular, a gate control of magnetism has been one of the central topics in this research field, and in fact significant achievements have been published including a recent paper on gate-tunable room temperature ferromagnetism in a van der Waals (vdW) magnetic metal, Fe3GeTe2 [1]. However, a material system explored so far has been limited either to magnetic semiconductors or to magnetic metals, whereas gating effects in magnetic semimetals have been largely unexplored despite the unique features of this class of materials associated with the band-crossing points in the momentum space. This peculiar band structure dominates overall magnetic properties (the Curie temperature (TC), anisotropy, and magnetotransport properties), which underpins the attractiveness of magnetic semimetals. Because the band-structure-driven magnetism in magnetic semimetals should be extremely sensitive to the Fermi level (EF), magnetic semimetals are one of the most attractive targets for gate control.
Here we report the gating effects in a vdW magnetic semimetal for the first time. We focus on Cr3Te4, an emergent vdW magnetic semimetal [2, 3], and unveil its anomalous carrier-dependent ferromagnetism through a series of the ion-gating experiments. In the presentation, we shows the detailed results on the gate-tunable magnetic properties of Cr3Te4, including TC, magnetic anisotropy, and magnetotransport properties. For details of this study, see the preprint at [4].
Here we report the gating effects in a vdW magnetic semimetal for the first time. We focus on Cr3Te4, an emergent vdW magnetic semimetal [2, 3], and unveil its anomalous carrier-dependent ferromagnetism through a series of the ion-gating experiments. In the presentation, we shows the detailed results on the gate-tunable magnetic properties of Cr3Te4, including TC, magnetic anisotropy, and magnetotransport properties. For details of this study, see the preprint at [4].
Publication: [1] Y. Deng, et. al, Nature 563, 94 (2018).
[2] Y. Fujisawa et. al, Adv. Mater. 35, 2207121 (2023).
[3] Y. Wang et. al, Nano. Lett. 22, 9964 (2022).
[4] H. Matsuoka et al, arXiv:2304.11890 (2023)
Presenters
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Hideki Matsuoka
The University of Tokyo, RIKEN CEMS
Authors
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Hideki Matsuoka
The University of Tokyo, RIKEN CEMS
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Shun Kajihara
The University of Tokyo
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Yue Wang
The University of Tokyo
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Yoshihiro Iwasa
Univ of Tokyo, The University of Tokyo, The University of Tokyo, RIKEN CEMS, Univ of Tokyo, RIKEN
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Masaki Nakano
The University of Tokyo, The University of Tokyo, RIKEN CEMS, University of Tokyo