4.7 Article

Nitrogen-vacancy magnetometry of CrSBr by diamond membrane transfer

Journal

NPJ 2D MATERIALS AND APPLICATIONS
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41699-023-00423-y

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Magnetic imaging using NV spins in diamonds is a powerful technique for studying sub-micron scale magnetic order. Placing the NV centers at a nanoscale distance from the target material is a challenge for research on 2D magnets. By using a diamond dry-transfer technique, researchers were able to place a diamond micro-membrane in direct contact with a 2D interlayer antiferromagnet and detect the magnetic stray fields generated by the antiferromagnet.
Magnetic imaging using nitrogen-vacancy (NV) spins in diamonds is a powerful technique for acquiring quantitative information about sub-micron scale magnetic order. A major challenge for its application in the research on two-dimensional (2D) magnets is the positioning of the NV centers at a well-defined, nanoscale distance to the target material required for detecting the small magnetic fields generated by magnetic monolayers. Here, we develop a diamond dry-transfer technique akin to the state-of-the-art 2D-materials assembly methods and use it to place a diamond micro-membrane in direct contact with the 2D interlayer antiferromagnet CrSBr. We harness the resulting NV-sample proximity to spatially resolve the magnetic stray fields generated by the CrSBr, present only where the CrSBr thickness changes by an odd number of layers. From the magnetic stray field of a single uncompensated ferromagnetic layer in the CrSBr, we extract a monolayer magnetization of MCSB = 0.46(2) T, without the need for exfoliation of monolayer crystals or applying large external magnetic fields. The ability to deterministically place NV-ensemble sensors into contact with target materials and detect ferromagnetic monolayer magnetizations paves the way for quantitative analysis of a wide range of 2D magnets assembled on arbitrary target substrates.

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