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1.
Nat Mater ; 21(9): 1029-1034, 2022 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35710631

RESUMEN

Spin-orbit torque (SOT)-driven deterministic control of the magnetic state of a ferromagnet with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy is key to next-generation spintronic applications including non-volatile, ultrafast and energy-efficient data-storage devices. However, field-free deterministic switching of perpendicular magnetization remains a challenge because it requires an out-of-plane antidamping torque, which is not allowed in conventional spin-source materials such as heavy metals and topological insulators due to the system's symmetry. The exploitation of low-crystal symmetries in emergent quantum materials offers a unique approach to achieve SOTs with unconventional forms. Here we report an experimental realization of field-free deterministic magnetic switching of a perpendicularly polarized van der Waals magnet employing an out-of-plane antidamping SOT generated in layered WTe2, a quantum material with a low-symmetry crystal structure. Our numerical simulations suggest that the out-of-plane antidamping torque in WTe2 is essential to explain the observed magnetization switching.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(23): 236403, 2020 Dec 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33337178

RESUMEN

The presence of an electrical transport current in a material is one of the simplest and most important realizations of nonequilibrium physics. The current density breaks the crystalline symmetry and can give rise to dramatic phenomena, such as sliding charge density waves, insulator-to-metal transitions, or gap openings in topologically protected states. Almost nothing is known about how a current influences the electron spectral function, which characterizes most of the solid's electronic, optical, and chemical properties. Here we show that angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy with a nanoscale light spot provides not only a wealth of information on local equilibrium properties, but also opens the possibility to access the local nonequilibrium spectral function in the presence of a transport current. Unifying spectroscopic and transport measurements in this way allows simultaneous noninvasive local measurements of the composition, structure, many-body effects, and carrier mobility in the presence of high current densities. In the particular case of our graphene-based device, we are able to correlate the presence of structural defects with locally reduced carrier lifetimes in the spectral function and a locally reduced mobility with a spatial resolution of 500 nm.

3.
ACS Energy Lett ; 9(4): 1617-1623, 2024 Apr 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38633996

RESUMEN

A hierarchical transparent back contact leveraging an AlGaOx passivating layer, Ti3C2Tx MXene with a high work function, and a transparent cracked film lithography (CFL) templated nanogrid is demonstrated on copper-free cadmium telluride (CdTe) devices. AlGaOx improves device open-circuit voltage but reduces the fill factor when using a CFL-templated metal contact. Including a Ti3C2Tx interlayer improves the fill factor, lowers detrimental Schottky barriers, and enables metallization with CFL by providing transverse conduction into the nanogrid. The bifacial performance of an AlGaOx/Ti3C2Tx/CFL gold contact is evaluated, reaching 19.5% frontside efficiency and 2.8% backside efficiency under 1-sun illumination for a copper-free, group-V doped CdTe device. Under dual illumination, device power generation reached 200 W/m2 with 0.1 sun backside illumination.

4.
ACS Nano ; 17(22): 22388-22398, 2023 Nov 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37947443

RESUMEN

MoTe2 can be converted from the semiconducting (2H) phase to the semimetallic (1T') phase by several stimuli including heat, electrochemical doping, and strain. This type of phase transition, if reversible and gate-controlled, could be useful for low-power memory and logic. In this work, a gate-controlled and fully reversible 2H to 1T' phase transition is demonstrated via strain in few-layer suspended MoTe2 field effect transistors. Strain is applied by the electric double layer gating of a suspended channel using a single ion conducting solid polymer electrolyte. The phase transition is confirmed by simultaneous electrical transport and Raman spectroscopy. The out-of-plane vibration peak (A1g)─a signature of the 1T' phase─is observed when VSG ≥ 2.5 V. Further, a redshift in the in-plane vibration mode (E2g) is detected, which is a characteristic of a strain-induced phonon shift. Based on the magnitude of the shift, strain is estimated to be 0.2-0.3% by density functional theory. Electrically, the temperature coefficient of resistance transitions from negative to positive at VSG ≥ 2 V, confirming the transition from semiconducting to metallic. The approach to gate-controlled, reversible straining presented here can be extended to strain other two-dimensional materials, explore fundamental material properties, and introduce electronic device functionalities.

5.
Adv Mater ; 32(31): e2001656, 2020 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32529706

RESUMEN

The possibility of triggering correlated phenomena by placing a singularity of the density of states near the Fermi energy remains an intriguing avenue toward engineering the properties of quantum materials. Twisted bilayer graphene is a key material in this regard because the superlattice produced by the rotated graphene layers introduces a van Hove singularity and flat bands near the Fermi energy that cause the emergence of numerous correlated phases, including superconductivity. Direct demonstration of electrostatic control of the superlattice bands over a wide energy range has, so far, been critically missing. This work examines the effect of electrical doping on the electronic band structure of twisted bilayer graphene using a back-gated device architecture for angle-resolved photoemission measurements with a nano-focused light spot. A twist angle of 12.2° is selected such that the superlattice Brillouin zone is sufficiently large to enable identification of van Hove singularities and flat band segments in momentum space. The doping dependence of these features is extracted over an energy range of 0.4 eV, expanding the combinations of twist angle and doping where they can be placed at the Fermi energy and thereby induce new correlated electronic phases in twisted bilayer graphene.

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