Ferromagnetism on an atom-thick and extended 2D-metal-organic framework
Jorge Lobo-Checa, Leyre Hern\'andez-L\'opez, Mikhail M. Otrokov,, Ignacio Piquero-Zulaica, Adriana Candia, Pierluigi Gargiani, David Serrate,, Manuel Valvidares, Jorge Cerd\`a, Andr\'es Arnau, Fernando Bartolom\'e

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the realization of extended ferromagnetism in an atom-thick 2D metal-organic framework composed of DCA molecules and Fe adatoms on Au(111), with potential applications in ultra-dense magnetic memories.
Contribution
First experimental demonstration of cooperative ferromagnetism in an atom-thick 2D-MOF with detailed multitechnique and first-principles analysis.
Findings
Ferromagnetism observed at TC ~ 35 K in 2D-MOF
Exchange interactions mainly through molecular linkers (J=2 meV)
Out-of-plane square-like hysteresis loop
Abstract
Ferromagnetism (FM) is the cornerstone of permanent magnets, data storage and other technologies that directly impact our everyday life by their implementation in standard applications and devices. When downscaling bulk materials into their two-dimensional (2D) magnetic isotropic form, the Mermin-Wagner theorem precludes this collective state mediated by short-range exchange interactions at finite temperatures. Interestingly, this prediction fails when significant magnetic anisotropy is present in the material, as recently demonstrated in single layered van der Waals crystals. Before the latter, single layer metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) grown on metallic supports were one of the earliest candidates for achieving 2D-FM. Such high expectations were based on the chemical and spacing control of the 2D-MOF magnetic centers, the tunability of the organic linkers and the rich self-assembled…
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.
Taxonomy
Topics2D Materials and Applications · Graphene research and applications · Theoretical and Computational Physics
