Role of quantum confinement and interlayer coupling in CrI$_3$-graphene magnetic tunnel junctions
Jonathan J. Heath, Marcio Costa, Marco Buongiorno-Nardelli, and, Marcelo A. Kuroda

TL;DR
This study combines first principles and quantum transport calculations to understand spin transport in CrI3-graphene heterostructures, highlighting quantum confinement and interlayer interactions as key factors influencing tunneling and magnetoresistance.
Contribution
It provides an atomistic understanding of spin transport mechanisms in 2D heterostructures, emphasizing the roles of quantum confinement and layer interactions, supported by quantitative calculations.
Findings
Tunneling is the dominant transport mechanism in these heterostructures.
Quantum confinement and interlayer interactions are crucial for accurate transport descriptions.
Calculated magnetoresistance aligns well with experimental data.
Abstract
Recent demonstrations of magnetic ordering and spin transport in two-dimensional heterostructures have opened research venues in these material systems. In order to control and enhance the related physical phenomena, quantitative descriptions linking experimental observations to atomic details must be produced. Here we combine first principles and quantum ballistic transport calculations to shed important insights from an atomistic viewpoint on the underlying mechanisms governing spin transport in graphene/CrI junctions. Descriptions of the electronic structure reveal that tunneling is the dominant transport mechanism in these heterostructures and help differentiate intermediate metamagnetic states present in the switching process. We find that quantum confinement and layer-layer interactions are key to describing transport in these two-dimensional systems. Ballistic transport…
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