Strain-tunable Berry curvature in quasi-two-dimensional chromium telluride

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Abstract

Magnetic transition metal chalcogenides form an emerging platform for exploring spin-orbit driven Berry phase phenomena owing to the nontrivial interplay between topology and magnetism. Here we show that the anomalous Hall effect in pristine Cr2Te3 thin films manifests a unique temperature-dependent sign reversal at nonzero magnetization, resulting from the momentum-space Berry curvature as established by first-principles simulations. The sign change is strain tunable, enabled by the sharp and well-defined substrate/film interface in the quasi-two-dimensional Cr2Te3 epitaxial films, revealed by scanning transmission electron microscopy and depth-sensitive polarized neutron reflectometry. This Berry phase effect further introduces hump-shaped Hall peaks in pristine Cr2Te3 near the coercive field during the magnetization switching process, owing to the presence of strain-modulated magnetic layers/domains. The versatile interface tunability of Berry curvature in Cr2Te3 thin films offers new opportunities for topological electronics.

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Chi, H., Ou, Y., Eldred, T. B., Gao, W., Kwon, S., Murray, J., … Moodera, J. S. (2023). Strain-tunable Berry curvature in quasi-two-dimensional chromium telluride. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38995-4

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