Magnetization dependent tunneling conductance of ferromagnetic barriers
Zhe Wang, Ignacio Guti\'errez-Lezama, Dumitru Dumcenco, Nicolas Ubrig,, Takashi Taniguchi, Kenji Watanabe, Enrico Giannini, Marco Gibertini, Alberto, F. Morpurgo

TL;DR
This study shows that tunneling conductance in CrBr3 ferromagnetic barriers reveals detailed magnetic information, including above and below the Curie temperature, by depending on magnetization and spin splitting, extending magnetic analysis methods beyond antiferromagnets.
Contribution
It demonstrates that tunneling conductance measurements can effectively probe the magnetic state of ferromagnetic van der Waals materials like CrBr3, using a spin-dependent tunneling model.
Findings
Conductance depends on magnetization M(H,T) across 2-50 K.
Tunneling conductance explained by spin-dependent Fowler-Nordheim model.
Magnetic information obtainable from ferromagnetic barriers like CrBr3.
Abstract
Recent experiments on van der Waals antiferrmagnets such as CrI3, CrCl3 and MnPS3 have shown that using atomically thin layers as tunnel barriers and measuring the temperature () and magnetic field () dependence of the conductance allows their magnetic phase diagram to be mapped. In contrast, barriers made of CrBr3 -- the sole van der Waals ferromagnet investigated in this way -- were found to exhibit small and featureless magnetoconductance, seemingly carrying little information about magnetism. Here we show that -- despite these early results -- the conductance of CrBr3 tunnel barriers does provide detailed information about the magnetic state of atomically thin CrBr3 crystals for both above and below the Curie temperature ( K). Our analysis establishes that the tunneling conductance depends on and exclusively through the magnetization , over the…
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