Room Temperature Optically and Magnetically Active Edges in Phosphorene Nanoribbons
Arjun Ashoka, Adam J. Clancy, Naitik A. Panjwani, Adam Cronin, Loren, Picco, Eva S. Y. Aw, Nicholas J. M. Popiel, Alex Eaton, Thomas G. Parton,, Rebecca R. C. Shutt, Sascha Feldmann, Remington Carey, Thomas J. Macdonald,, Marion E. Severijnen, Sandra Kleuskens

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that phosphorene nanoribbons exhibit room-temperature magnetic and semiconducting properties at their edges, opening pathways for spin-based electronics and quantum devices.
Contribution
It reveals for the first time that phosphorene nanoribbons have intrinsic magnetic and semiconducting edge states active at room temperature.
Findings
PNRs exhibit macroscopic magnetic properties at room temperature.
Energy funnels to a dark-exciton state localized at magnetic edges upon photoexcitation.
Magnetic anisotropy enables alignment of PNRs in modest magnetic fields.
Abstract
Nanoribbons - nanometer wide strips of a two-dimensional material - are a unique system in condensed matter physics. They combine the exotic electronic structures of low-dimensional materials with an enhanced number of exposed edges, where phenomena including ultralong spin coherence times, quantum confinement and topologically protected states can emerge. An exciting prospect for this new material concept is the potential for both a tunable semiconducting electronic structure and magnetism along the nanoribbon edge. This combination of magnetism and semiconducting properties is the first step in unlocking spin-based electronics such as non-volatile transistors, a route to low-energy computing, and has thus far typically only been observed in doped semiconductor systems and/or at low temperatures. Here, we report the magnetic and semiconducting properties of phosphorene nanoribbons…
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