Physical Review X (Feb 2021)

Emergent Magnetic Phases in Pressure-Tuned van der Waals Antiferromagnet FePS_{3}

  • Matthew J. Coak,
  • David M. Jarvis,
  • Hayrullo Hamidov,
  • Andrew R. Wildes,
  • Joseph A. M. Paddison,
  • Cheng Liu,
  • Charles R. S. Haines,
  • Ngoc T. Dang,
  • Sergey E. Kichanov,
  • Boris N. Savenko,
  • Sungmin Lee,
  • Marie Kratochvílová,
  • Stefan Klotz,
  • Thomas C. Hansen,
  • Denis P. Kozlenko,
  • Je-Geun Park,
  • Siddharth S. Saxena

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.11.011024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 011024

Abstract

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Layered van der Waals 2D magnetic materials are of great interest in fundamental condensed-matter physics research, as well as for potential applications in spintronics and device physics. We present neutron powder diffraction data using new ultrahigh-pressure techniques to measure the magnetic structure of Mott-insulating 2D honeycomb antiferromagnet FePS_{3} at pressures up to 183 kbar and temperatures down to 80 K. These data are complemented by high-pressure magnetometry and reverse Monte Carlo modeling of the spin configurations. As pressure is applied, the previously measured ambient-pressure magnetic order switches from an antiferromagnetic to a ferromagnetic interplanar interaction and from 2D-like to 3D-like character. The overall antiferromagnetic structure within the ab planes, ferromagnetic chains antiferromagnetically coupled, is preserved, but the magnetic propagation vector is altered from k=(0,1,1/2) to k=(0,1,0), a halving of the magnetic unit cell size. At higher pressures, coincident with the second structural transition and the insulator-metal transition in this compound, we observe a suppression of this long-range order and emergence of a form of magnetic short-range order which survives above room temperature. Reverse Monte Carlo fitting suggests this phase to be a short-ranged version of the original ambient-pressure structure—with the Fe moment size remaining of similar magnitude and with a return to antiferromagnetic interplanar correlations. The persistence of magnetism well into the HP-II metallic state is an observation in contradiction with previous x-ray spectroscopy results which suggest a spin-crossover transition.