First-principles study of magnetism and electric field effects in 2D systems
Hai-Ping Cheng, Shuanglong Liu, Xiao Chen, Long Zhang, James N Fry

TL;DR
This review highlights how first-principles methods, especially density functional theory, can be used to study magnetism and electric field effects in various 2D materials, with new insights into CrI3 bilayers.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of first-principles techniques applied to 2D systems and presents new results on electric field effects and magnetic phase transitions in CrI3 bilayers.
Findings
Different high-field responses in various bilayer configurations.
Small field effects are similar across different heterostructures.
Electric fields can induce magnetic phase transitions in CrI3 bilayers.
Abstract
This review article provides a bird's-eye view of what first-principles based methods can contribute to next-generation device design and simulation. After a brief overview of methods and capabilities in the area, we focus on published work by our group since 2015 and current work on . We introduce both single- and dual-gate models in the framework of density functional theory and the constrained random phase approximation in estimating the Hubbard for 2D systems vs. their 3D counterparts. A wide range of systems, including graphene-based heterogeneous systems, transition metal dichalcogenides, and topological insulators, and a rich array of physical phenomena, including the macroscopic origin of polarization, field effects on magnetic order, interface state resonance induced peak in transmission coefficients, spin filtration, etc., are covered. For …
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
