Communications Materials (Mar 2024)

Visualizing thickness-dependent magnetic textures in few-layer Cr2Ge2Te6

  • Andriani Vervelaki,
  • Kousik Bagani,
  • Daniel Jetter,
  • Manh-Ha Doan,
  • Tuan K. Chau,
  • Boris Gross,
  • Dennis V. Christensen,
  • Peter Bøggild,
  • Martino Poggio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43246-024-00477-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Magnetic ordering in two-dimensional (2D) materials has recently emerged as a promising platform for data storage, computing, and sensing. To advance these developments, it is vital to gain a detailed understanding of how the magnetic order evolves on the nanometer-scale as a function of the number of atomic layers and applied magnetic field. Here, we image few-layer Cr2Ge2Te6 using a combined scanning superconducting quantum interference device and atomic force microscopy probe. Maps of the material’s stray magnetic field as a function of applied magnetic field reveal its magnetization per layer as well as the thickness-dependent magnetic texture. Using a micromagnetic model, we correlate measured stray-field patterns with the underlying magnetization configurations, including labyrinth domains and skyrmionic bubbles. Comparison between real-space images and simulations demonstrates that the layer dependence of the material’s magnetic texture is a result of the thickness-dependent balance between crystalline and shape anisotropy. These findings represent an important step towards 2D spintronic devices with engineered spin configurations and controlled dependence on external magnetic fields.