Controlling the Magnetic Anisotropy of the van der Waals Ferromagnet Fe<sub>3</sub>GeTe<sub>2</sub> through Hole Doping

Se Young Park(Seoul National University), Dong Seob Kim(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Yu Liu(Brookhaven National Laboratory), Jinwoong Hwang(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Younghak Kim(Pohang University of Science and Technology), Wondong Kim(Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science), Jae‐Young Kim(Institute for Basic Science), C. Petrović(Brookhaven National Laboratory), Choongyu Hwang(Pusan National University), Sung‐Kwan Mo(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Hyung-jun Kim(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Byoung‐Chul Min(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Hyun Cheol Koo(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Joonyeon Chang(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Chaun Jang(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Jun Woo Choi(Korea Institute of Science and Technology), Hyejin Ryu(Korea Institute of Science and Technology)
Nano Letters
November 22, 2019
Cited by 173Open Access
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Abstract

Identifying material parameters affecting properties of ferromagnets is key to optimized materials that are better suited for spintronics. Magnetic anisotropy is of particular importance in van der Waals magnets, since it not only influences magnetic and spin transport properties, but also is essential to stabilizing magnetic order in the two-dimensional limit. Here, we report that hole doping effectively modulates the magnetic anisotropy of a van der Waals ferromagnet and explore the physical origin of this effect. Fe3–xGeTe2 nanoflakes show a significant suppression of the magnetic anisotropy with hole doping. Electronic structure measurements and calculations reveal that the chemical potential shift associated with hole doping is responsible for the reduced magnetic anisotropy by decreasing the energy gain from the spin–orbit induced band splitting. Our findings provide an understanding of the intricate connection between electronic structures and magnetic properties in two-dimensional magnets and propose a method to engineer magnetic properties through doping.


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