Magnetic and Multiferroic Properties of Two-Dimensional FePX3 and CuFeP2X6 (X = S, Se, and Te)

Magnetic and Multiferroic Properties of Two-Dimensional FePX3 and CuFeP2X6 (X = S, Se, and Te)

Qingyang Wang, Mengmeng Niu, Weikang Zhou, Yicheng Ma, Chun Huang, Gege Yang, Yan Shao, Xu Wu, Cong Wang, Wei Ji*, Yeliang Wang*, Jingsi Qiao*

Two-dimensional (2D) multiferroic materials have significant application potential for novel storage devices due to their tunable magnetic and ferroelectric properties. Transition metal phosphorus chalcogenides MPX3 (X = S, Se, and Te) were found to be magnetic and multiferroic with excellent tunability, promising for multifunctionalized applications. In this study, we investigated the antiferromagnetic and antiferroelectric properties of two-dimensional FePX3 and CuFeP2X6 by density functional theory. Monolayer FePS3/FePSe3 and FePTe3 take intralayer zigzag and Neel antiferromagnetic ground states, respectively. This tunability of intralayer magnetism results from the competition between the spin-exchange interactions of the first and second nearest Fe atoms. Bilayer FePX3 shows weak interlayer interactions and keeps electronic and magnetic characteristics similar to those of the monolayer. Moreover, by introducing the nonmagnetic Cu atom into FePX3, the inversion symmetry broken induces CuFeP2X6 to be multiferroic materials. The transition barrier between ferroelectric (FE) and antiferroelectric (AFE) phases in CuFeP2S6 and CuFeP2Se6 is 0.09 and 0.04 eV/f.u., similar to well-known multiferroic CuCrP2S6. FE-to-AFE phase transition is expected to be achieved by applying an electric field and uniaxial strain. CuFeP2Te6 shows the ground state with a distorted paraelectric phase. Our results show the fundamental properties and in-depth understanding of 2D FePX3 and CuFeP2X6, guiding further investigation of 2D multifunctionalized magnetoelectric devices.

Evidence of Ferroelectricity in an Antiferromagnetic Vanadium Trichloride Monolayer

Evidence of Ferroelectricity in an Antiferromagnetic Vanadium Trichloride Monolayer

Science Advances, in press (2025); ArXiv:2404.13513 (2024)

Jinghao Deng#, Deping Guo#, Yao Wen, Shuangzan Lu, Zhengbo Cheng, Zemin Pan, Tao Jian, Yusong Bai, Hui Zhang, Wei Ji*, Jun He*, Chendong Zhang*

Multiferroicity allows magnetism to be controlled using electric fields or vice versa, which has gained tremendous interest in both fundamental research and device applications. A reduced dimensionality of multiferroic materials is highly desired for device miniaturization, but the coexistence of ferroelectricity and magnetism at the two-dimensional limit is still debated. Here, we used a NbSe2 substrate to break both the C3 rotational and inversion symmetries in monolayer VCl3 and thus introduced exceptional in-plane ferroelectricity into a two dimensional magnet. Scanning tunnelling spectroscopy directly visualized ferroelectric domains and manipulated their domain boundaries in monolayer VCl3, where coexisting antiferromagnetic order with canted magnetic moments was verified by vibrating sample magnetometer measurements. Our density functional theory calculations highlight the crucial role that highly directional interfacial Cl–Se interactions play in breaking the symmetries and thus in introducing in-plane ferroelectricity, which was further verified by examining an ML-VCl3/graphene sample. Our work demonstrates an approach to manipulate the ferroelectric states in monolayered magnets through van der Waals interfacial interactions.

Magnetically-controlled non-volatile charging states in bilayer graphene-CrOCl heterostructures

Magnetically-controlled non-volatile charging states in bilayer graphene-CrOCl heterostructures

Shimin Cao#, Runjie Zheng#, Cong Wang#, Ning Ma, Mantang Chen, Yuanjun Song, Ya Feng, Tingting Hao, Yu Zhang, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, X.C. Xie, Wei Ji*, Yu Ye*, Zheng Han*, Jian-Hao Chen*

Charge carrier densities in electronic heterostructures are typically responsive to external electric fields or chemical doping but rarely to their magnetization history. Here, we demonstrate that magnetization acts as a non-volatile control parameter for the density of states in bilayer graphene (BLG) interfaced with the antiferromagnetic insulator chromium oxychloride (COC). Using capacitance measurements, we observe a hysteretic behavior in the density of states of BLG on a COC substrate in response to an external magnetic field, which is unrelated to the history of electrostatic gating. First-principles calculations revealed that such hysteresis arises from the magnetic-field-controlled charge transfer between BLG and COC during the antiferromagnetic (AFM) to ferrimagnetic-like (FiM) state phase transition of COC. Our work demonstrates that interfacial charging states can be effectively controlled magnetically, and it also shows that capacitance measurement is a suitable technique for detecting subtle changes not detectable via conventional resistivity measurements. These findings broaden the scope of proximity effects and open new possibilities for nanoelectronics applications.

Coexistence of ferroelectricity and antiferroelectricity in 2D van der Waals multiferroic

Coexistence of ferroelectricity and antiferroelectricity in 2D van der Waals multiferroic

Yangliu Wu, Zhaozhuo Zeng, Haipeng Lu, Xiaocang Han, Chendi Yang, Nanshu Liu, Xiaoxu Zhao, Liang Qiao, Wei Ji*, Renchao Che, Longjiang Deng*, Peng Yan* and Bo Peng*

Multiferroic materials have been intensively pursued to achieve the mutual control of electric and magnetic properties. The breakthrough progress in 2D magnets and ferroelectrics encourages the exploration of low-dimensional multiferroics, which holds the promise of understanding inscrutable magnetoelectric coupling and inventing advanced spintronic devices. However, confirming ferroelectricity with optical techniques is challenging in 2D materials, particularly in conjunction with antiferromagnetic orders in single- and few-layer multiferroics. Here, we report the discovery of 2D vdW multiferroic with out-of plane ferroelectric polarization in trilayer NiI2 device, as revealed by scanning reflective magnetic circular dichroism microscopy and ferroelectric hysteresis loops. The evolution between ferroelectric and antiferroelectric phases has been unambiguously observed. Moreover, the magnetoelectric interaction is directly probed by magnetic control of the multiferroic domain switching. This work opens up opportunities for exploring new multiferroic orders and multiferroic physics at the limit of single or few atomic layers, and for creating advanced magnetoelectronic devices.