iScience (Nov 2022)

Air-stable van der Waals PtTe2 conductors with high current-carrying capacity and strong spin-orbit interaction

  • Seunguk Song,
  • Inseon Oh,
  • Sora Jang,
  • Aram Yoon,
  • Juwon Han,
  • Zonghoon Lee,
  • Jung-Woo Yoo,
  • Soon-Yong Kwon

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 11
p. 105346

Abstract

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Summary: High-performance van der Waals (vdW) integrated electronics and spintronics require reliable current-carrying capacity. However, it is challenging to achieve high current density and air-stable performance using vdW metals owing to the fast electrical breakdown triggered by defects or oxidation. Here, we report that spin-orbit interacted synthetic PtTe2 layers exhibit significant electrical reliability and robustness in ambient air. The 4-nm-thick PtTe2 synthesized at a low temperature (∼400°C) shows intrinsic metallic transport behavior and a weak antilocalization effect attributed to the strong spin-orbit scattering. Remarkably, PtTe2 sustains a high current density approaching ≈31.5 MA cm−2, which is the highest value among electrical interconnect candidates under oxygen exposure. Electrical failure is caused by the Joule heating of PtTe2 rather than defect-induced electromigration, which was achievable by the native TeOx passivation. The high-quality growth of PtTe2 and the investigation of its transport behaviors lay out essential foundations for the development of emerging vdW spin-orbitronics.

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