Tunneling current-controlled spin states in few-layer van der Waals magnets
Article 2024 en
Authors
ZF
Zhuangen Fu
PS
Piumi Samarawickrama
JA
John Ackerman
Abstract
1 min read
Effective control of magnetic phases in two-dimensional magnets would constitute crucial progress in spintronics, holding great potential for future computing technologies. Here, we report a new approach of leveraging tunneling current as a tool for controlling spin states in CrI<sub>3</sub>. We reveal that a tunneling current can deterministically switch between spin-parallel and spin-antiparallel states in few-layer CrI<sub>3</sub>, depending on the polarity and amplitude of the current. We propose a mechanism involving nonequilibrium spin accumulation in the graphene electrodes in contact with the CrI<sub>3</sub> layers. We further demonstrate tunneling current-tunable stochastic switching between multiple spin states of the CrI<sub>3</sub> tunnel devices, which goes beyond conventional bi-stable stochastic magnetic tunnel junctions and has not been documented in two-dimensional magnets. Our findings not only address the existing knowledge gap concerning the influence of tunneling currents in controlling the magnetism in two-dimensional magnets, but also unlock possibilities for energy-efficient probabilistic and neuromorphic computing.
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