Twist engineering of the two-dimensional magnetism in double bilayer chromium triiodide homostructures
Hongchao Xie, Xiangpeng Luo, Gaihua Ye, Zhipeng Ye, Haiwen Ge, Suk, Hyun Sung, Emily Rennich, Shaohua Yan, Yang Fu, Shangjie Tian, Hechang Lei,, Robert Hovden, Kai Sun, Rui He, Liuyan Zhao

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the experimental realization of twist engineering in 2D magnet chromium triiodide homostructures, revealing new magnetic states and control over spin properties through precise twist angles.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental demonstration of twist engineering in 2D magnetic homostructures, showing how twist angles can modulate magnetic ground states and spin characteristics.
Findings
Identification of a new magnetic ground state via magneto-Raman spectroscopy.
Observation of twist-angle-dependent magnetism resembling superpositions of known states.
Discovery of a unique magnetic state at intermediate twist angles with distinct circular dichroism.
Abstract
Twist engineering, or the alignment of two-dimensional (2D) crystalline layers with desired orientations, has led to tremendous success in modulating the charge degree of freedom in hetero- and homo-structures, in particular, in achieving novel correlated and topological electronic phases in moir\'e electronic crystals. However, although pioneering theoretical efforts have predicted nontrivial magnetism and magnons out of twisting 2D magnets, experimental realization of twist engineering spin degree of freedom remains elusive. Here, we leverage the archetypal 2D Ising magnet chromium triiodide (CrI3) to fabricate twisted double bilayer homostructures with tunable twist angles and demonstrate the successful twist engineering of 2D magnetism in them. Using linear and circular polarization-resolved Raman spectroscopy, we identify magneto-Raman signatures of a new magnetic ground state that…
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