Atomic scale demonstration of ferromagnetism in a single layer FeCl2 on Au(111)
Adriana E. Candia, Eliecer Pel\'aez-Sifonte, Amitayush Jha Thakur, Sebastien E. Hadjadj, Samuel Kerschbaumer, Aymeric Saunot, Martina Corso, Maxim Ilyn, Jorge Lobo-Checa, Celia Rogero, David Serrate

TL;DR
This study demonstrates ferromagnetic ordering at the atomic scale in a single-layer FeCl2 on Au(111), confirming its magnetic properties and substrate influence through spin-polarized microscopy.
Contribution
It provides the first atomic-scale evidence of ferromagnetism in single-layer FeCl2 on a gold substrate, clarifying its magnetic and electronic ground states.
Findings
Ferromagnetic ordering confirmed via spin-polarized STM.
Insulating gap of 3.3 eV with a spin-polarized conduction band at 1.5 eV.
Atomic defects influence local electronic and magnetic properties.
Abstract
FeCl2 is a promising single-layer material with sizeable magnetic susceptibility and insulating character that can be easily grown by molecular beam epitaxy on various surfaces. In order to include it into the select palette of van der Waals materials used to engineer functional heterostructures, it is necessary to confirm its magnetic and electronic ground states, and understand the influence of the supporting substrate. In this work, we unambiguously demonstrate ferromagnetic ordering in a single-layer FeCl2 on Au(111) by means of spin-polarized scanning tunnelling microscopy. The material features a relatively wide insulating gap of 3.3 eV and a strongly spin-polarized conduction band that emerges at 1.5 eV above the Fermi level. Atomic scale defects with triangular shape play a primary role in the electronic gap and spin density distribution. Specifically, in a region of 1.6 nm…
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.
