Two-dimensional room-temperature ferromagnet CrTe2 is a promising candidate material for spintronic applications. However, its large-scale and cost-effective synthesis remains a challenge. Here, we report the fine controllable synthesis of wafer-scale 1T-CrTe2 films on a SiO2/Si substrate using plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition at temperatures below 400 ºC. Magnetic hysteresis measurements reveal that the synthesized 1T-CrTe2 films exhibit perpendicular magnetic anisotropy along with distinct step-like magnetic transitions. We find that 1T-CrTe2 is susceptible to oxygen adsorption even in ambient conditions. Our theoretical calculations indicate that the oxidation of surface layers is crucial for the absence of out-of-plane easy axis in few-layer CrTe2, while the interlayer antiferromagnetic coupling among the upper surface layers leads to the observed step-like magnetic transitions. Our study provides a Si-CMOS compatible approach for the fabrication of magnetic two-dimensional materials and highlights how unintentional adsorbents or dopants can significantly influence the magnetic behaviors of these materials.
Zhongqin Zhang† , Jiaqi Dai† , Cong Wang , Hua Zhu , Fei Pang , Zhihai Cheng, and Wei Ji*
Abstract:
In recent years, kagome materials have attracted significant attention due to their rich emergent phenomena arising from the quantum interplay of geometry, topology, spin, and correlations. However, in the search for kagome materials, it has been found that bulk compounds with electronic properties related to the kagome lattice are relatively scarce, primarily due to the hybridization of kagome layers with adjacent layers. Therefore, researchers have shown increasing interest in the discovery and construction of two-dimensional (2D) kagome materials, aiming to achieve clean kagome bands near the Fermi level in monolayer or few-layer systems. Substantial advancements have already been made in this area. In this review, we summarize the current progress in the construction and development of 2D kagome materials. We begin by introducing the geometric and electronic structures of the kagome lattice model and its variants, followed by discussions on the experimental realizations and electronic structure characterizations of 2D kagome materials. Finally, we provide an outlook on the future developments of 2D kagome materials.
Interlayer coupling plays a critical role in tuning the electronic structures and magnetic ground states of two-dimensional materials, influenced by the number of layers, interlayer distance, and stacking order. However, its effect on the orientation of the magnetic easy axis remains underexplored. In this study, we demonstrate that interlayer coupling can significantly alter the magnetic easy-axis orientation, as shown by the magnetic easy-axis of monolayer 1T-MnSe2 tilting 33° from the z-axis, while aligning with the z-axis in the bilayer. This change results from variations in orbital occupations near the Fermi level, particularly involving nonmetallic Se atoms. Contrary to the traditional focus on magnetic metal atoms, our findings reveal that Se orbitals play a key role in influencing the easy-axis orientation and topological Chern numbers. Furthermore, we show that the occupation of Se p-orbitals, and consequently the magnetic anisotropy, can be modulated by factors such as stacking order, charge doping, and external strain. Our results highlight the pivotal role of interlayer coupling in tuning the magnetic properties of layered materials, with important implications for spintronic applications.
Two-dimensional Janus materials exhibit unique physical properties due to broken inversional symmetries. However, it remains elusive to synthesize Janus monolayer crystals with tailored long-range magnetic orders. Here, we show a 2 ×√𝟑 charge density wave (CDW) transition and regulations of magnetization in a uniform Janus CrTeSe monolayer, selectively selenized from a pristine CrTe2 monolayer using molecular beam epitaxy. Scanning transmission electron microscopy images indicate the high quality and uniformity of the Janus structure. Spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy measurements and density functional theory calculations unveil a robust zigzag antiferromagnetic order and the CDW transition in the CrTeSe monolayer. The one-side selenization breaks the vertical inversion symmetry, rotating the magnetic moment directions to the in-plane direction. The CDW transition opens a gap at the Fermi level and reorients the magnetic moments in tilted directions. Our work demonstrates the construction of large-area Janus structures and the tailoring of electronic and magnetic properties of two-dimensional Janus layers.
The quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect in two-dimensional (2D) topological materials has attracted widespread attention due to its potential for dissipationless chiral edge transport without an external magnetic field, which is highly promising for low-power electronic applications. However, identifying materials that exhibit these properties remains particularly challenging, as only a limited number of such materials are known, raising the intriguing question of whether it is possible to induce the QAH effect in materials with ordinary properties through structural modifications. In this work, we grow an unreported 2D titanium selenide (Ti3Se4) on a Cu(111) substrate using molecular beam epitaxy. Low-energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy characterizations reveal a brick-like structure. First-principles calculations and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements confirm its composition to be Ti3Se4. Our calculations further demonstrate that monolayer Ti3Se4, in its grown form on Cu(111), has the potential to host the QAH effect. Interestingly, when we examine its freestanding form, the monolayer transitions from a QAH insulator candidate into a conventional semiconductor, despite only minor differences in their atomic structures. This transition enlightens us that subtle lattice adjustments can induce a transition from semiconductor to QAH properties in freestanding Ti3Se4. This discovery provides a potential route to engineering practical materials that may exhibit the QAH effect.