Probing Magnetic Ordering in Air Stable Iron‐Rich Van der Waals Minerals

Author:

Khan Muhammad Zubair1ORCID,Peil Oleg E.2ORCID,Sharma Apoorva3ORCID,Selyshchev Oleksandr34ORCID,Valencia Sergio5ORCID,Kronast Florian5ORCID,Zimmermann Maik6,Aslam Muhammad Awais1ORCID,Raith Johann G.6ORCID,Teichert Christian1ORCID,Zahn Dietrich R. T.34ORCID,Salvan Georgeta34ORCID,Matković Aleksandar1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Chair of Physics Department Physics, Mechanics and Electrical Engineering Montanuniversität Leoben Leoben 8700 Austria

2. Group of Computational Materials Design Materials Center Leoben Forschung GmbH (MCL) Leoben 8700 Austria

3. Semiconductor Physics Chemnitz University of Technology D‐09107 Chemnitz Germany

4. Centre for Materials, Architecture and Integration of Nanomembranes (MAIN) Chemnitz University of Technology 09126 Chemnitz Germany

5. Department of Spin and Topology in Quantum Materials Helmholtz‐Zentrum Berlin D‐12489 Berlin Germany

6. Chair of Resource Mineralogy Montanuniversität Leoben Leoben 8700 Austria

Abstract

AbstractMagnetic monolayers show great promise for future applications in nanoelectronics, data storage, and sensing. The research in magnetic two‐dimensional (2D) materials focuses on synthetic iodides and tellurides, which suffer from a lack of ambient stability. So far, naturally occurring layered magnetic materials have been overlooked. These minerals offer a unique opportunity to explore complex air‐stable layered systems with high concentration of magnetic ions. Magnetic ordering in iron‐rich phyllosilicates is demonstrated, focusing on minnesotaite, annite, and biotite. These naturally occurring layered materials integrate local moment baring ions of iron via magnesium/aluminum substitution in their octahedral sites. Self‐inherent capping by silicate/aluminate tetrahedral groups enables air stability of ultra‐thin layers. Their structure and iron oxidation states are determined via Raman and X‐ray spectroscopies. Superconducting quantum interference device magnetometry measurements are performed to examine the magnetic ordering. Paramagnetic or superparamagnetic characteristics at room temperature are observed. Below 40 K ferrimagnetic or antiferromagnetic ordering occurs. In‐field magnetic force microscopy on exfoliated flakes confirms that the paramagnetic response at room temperature persists down to monolayers. Further, a correlation between the mixture of the oxidation states of iron and the critical ordering temperature is established, indicating a path to design materials with higher critical temperatures via oxidation state engineering.

Publisher

Wiley

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