4.6 Article

Electrically tunable and reversible magnetoelectric coupling in strained bilayer graphene

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 103, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.103.224426

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cornell Center for Materials Research
  2. NSF MRSEC program [DMR-1719875]

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Valleys in hexagonal two-dimensional systems with broken inversion symmetry possess intrinsic orbital magnetic moment, but require uniaxial strain and in-plane electric field to introduce nonzero net magnetization. Studies suggest that Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene can achieve significant orbital magnetization under certain conditions, and the magnetoelectric susceptibility can switch sign with changes in in-plane electric field and carrier density.
The valleys in hexagonal two-dimensional systems with broken inversion symmetry carry an intrinsic orbital magnetic moment. Despite this, such systems possess zero net magnetization unless additional symmetries are broken since the contributions from both valleys cancel. A nonzero net magnetization can be induced through applying both uniaxial strain to break the rotational symmetry of the lattice and an in-plane electric field to break time-reversal symmetry owing to the resulting current. This creates a magnetoelectric effect whose strength is characterized by a magnetoelectric susceptibility, which describes the induced magnetization per unit applied inplane electric field. Here, we predict the strength of this magnetoelectric susceptibility for Bernal-stacked bilayer graphene as a function of the magnitude and direction of strain, the chemical potential, and the interlayer electric field. We estimate that an orbital magnetization of similar to 5400 mu(B)/mu m(2) can be achieved for 1% uniaxial strain and a 10-mu A bias current, which is almost three orders of magnitude larger than previously probed experimentally in strained monolayer MoS2. We also identify regimes in which the magnetoelectric susceptibility switches sign not only upon reversal of the interlayer electric field, but also in response to small changes in the carrier density. Taking advantage of this reversibility, we further show that it is experimentally feasible to probe the effect using scanning magnetometry.

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