Interfaces between twisted 2D materials host a wealth of physical phenomena originating from the long-scale periodicity associated with the resulting moir & eacute; structure. Besides twisting, an alternative route to create structures with comparably long-or even longer-periodicities is inducing a differential strain between adjacent layers in a van der Waals (vdW) material. Despite recent theoretical efforts analyzing its benefits, this route has not yet been implemented experimentally. Here we report evidence for the simultaneous presence of ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic regions in CrBr3-a hallmark of moir & eacute; magnetism-from the observation of an unexpected magnetoconductance in CrBr3 tunnel barriers with ferromagnetic Fe3GeTe2 and graphene electrodes. The observed magnetoconductance evolves with temperature and magnetic field as the magnetoconductance measured in small-angle CrBr3 twisted junctions, in which moir & eacute; magnetism occurs. Consistent with Raman measurements and theoretical modeling, we attribute the phenomenon to the presence of a differential strain in the CrBr3 multilayer, which locally modifies the stacking and the interlayer exchange between adjacent CrBr3 layers, resulting in spatially modulated spin textures. Our conclusions indicate that inducing differential strain in vdW multilayers is a viable strategy to create moir & eacute;-like superlattices, which in the future may offer in-situ continuous tunability even at low temperatures.The overlap of different crystal lattices can give rise to a Moire structure with long range periodicity. While this feature has been heavily exploited in twisted van der Waals heterostructures, here, Yao et al find the telltale signatures of Moire magnetism in CrBr3 multilayers induced by differential strain, in the absence of twisting.

Moiré magnetism in CrBr3 multilayers emerging from differential strain

Gibertini, M;
2024

Abstract

Interfaces between twisted 2D materials host a wealth of physical phenomena originating from the long-scale periodicity associated with the resulting moir & eacute; structure. Besides twisting, an alternative route to create structures with comparably long-or even longer-periodicities is inducing a differential strain between adjacent layers in a van der Waals (vdW) material. Despite recent theoretical efforts analyzing its benefits, this route has not yet been implemented experimentally. Here we report evidence for the simultaneous presence of ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic regions in CrBr3-a hallmark of moir & eacute; magnetism-from the observation of an unexpected magnetoconductance in CrBr3 tunnel barriers with ferromagnetic Fe3GeTe2 and graphene electrodes. The observed magnetoconductance evolves with temperature and magnetic field as the magnetoconductance measured in small-angle CrBr3 twisted junctions, in which moir & eacute; magnetism occurs. Consistent with Raman measurements and theoretical modeling, we attribute the phenomenon to the presence of a differential strain in the CrBr3 multilayer, which locally modifies the stacking and the interlayer exchange between adjacent CrBr3 layers, resulting in spatially modulated spin textures. Our conclusions indicate that inducing differential strain in vdW multilayers is a viable strategy to create moir & eacute;-like superlattices, which in the future may offer in-situ continuous tunability even at low temperatures.The overlap of different crystal lattices can give rise to a Moire structure with long range periodicity. While this feature has been heavily exploited in twisted van der Waals heterostructures, here, Yao et al find the telltale signatures of Moire magnetism in CrBr3 multilayers induced by differential strain, in the absence of twisting.
2024
Istituto Nanoscienze - NANO - Sede Secondaria Modena
Istituto Nanoscienze - NANO
twisted 2D materials, magnetism, tunnelling
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/523094
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