Abstract
The absence of two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals (vdW) ferromagnetic crystals with both above-room-temperature strong intrinsic ferromagnetism and large perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) severely hinders practical applications of 2D vdW crystals in next-generation low-power magnetoelectronic and spintronic devices. Here, we report a vdW intrinsic ferromagnetic crystal Fe3GaTe2 that exhibits record-high above-room-temperature Curie temperature (Tc, ~350-380 K) for known 2D vdW intrinsic ferromagnets, high saturation magnetic moment (40.11 emu/g), large PMA energy density (~4.79 × 105 J/m3), and large anomalous Hall angle (3%) at room temperature. Such large room-temperature PMA is better than conventional widely-used ferromagnetic films like CoFeB, and one order of magnitude larger than known 2D vdW intrinsic ferromagnets. Room-temperature thickness and angle-dependent anomalous Hall devices and direct magnetic domains imaging based on Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet have been realized. This work provides an avenue for room-temperature 2D ferromagnetism, electrical control of 2D ferromagnetism and promote the practical applications of 2D-vdW-integrated spintronic devices.
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Introduction
Above-room-temperature intrinsic ferromagnetism with robust large perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) is critical for many magnetoelectronic devices such as magnetic tunnel junctions and magnetic random access memory1, 2. Intrinsic ferromagnetic two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals (vdW) materials have promote the development of various multifunctional spintronic devices such as spin tunnel field-effect transistor, electron tunneling junction, giant tunneling magnetoresistance device and single-spin microscopy3,4,5,6. Typically, long-range ferromagnetism in 2D isotropic systems is vulnerable for the thermal fluctuations according to the Mermin–Wagner theorem7, but can be stabilized by the spin-wave excitation gap caused by magnetic anisotropy8. However, up to now, robust large room-temperature PMA only exists in conventional non-vdW ferromagnetic thin films like CoFeB (magnetic anisotropy energy density Ku, 2.1 × 105 J/m3)1. No intrinsic 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystals such as CrI3, Cr2Ge2Te6, Fe3GeTe2 and CrTe2 combine above-room-temperature intrinsic strong ferromagnetism (e.g., saturation magnetic moment Msat only ~12.5 emu/g in CrTe2 at 300 K9) and robust large room-temperature PMA (e.g., Ku only 4.9 × 104 J/m3 in 2D CrTe2 thin film at 300 K10, one order of magnitude lower than widely-used CoFeB thin film)8, 11,12,13,14,15. 2D vdW intrinsic ferromagnetic crystals with above-room-temperature Curie temperature (TC) and robust large room-temperature PMA are still elusive, but fundamentally important for room-temperature electrically control ferromagnetism and next-generation, room-temperature-operated 2D low-power magnetoelectronic and spintronic devices.
Here, we report a 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystal Fe3GaTe2 which combines intrinsic above-room-temperature strong ferromagnetism and robust large PMA. The Curie temperature TC of Fe3GaTe2 2D crystals is up to ~350–380 K, record-high for known intrinsic 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystals. At room temperature, high saturation magnetic moment (Msat, 40.11 emu/g), robust large PMA energy density (Ku, ~4.79 × 105 J/m3 for bulk crystal and ~3.88 × 105 J/m3 for 2D crystal) and large anomalous Hall angle (θAH, 3%) are identified by magnetization and magneto-transport measurements. Furthermore, room-temperature thickness- and angle-dependent anomalous Hall devices and direct magnetic domains imaging based on Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet have been realized. This work introduces an excellent above-room-temperature 2D intrinsic ferromagnetic crystal candidate for next-generation 2D-vdW-integrated magnetoelectronic and spintronic devices.
Results
Characterizations of vdW Fe3GaTe2 crystals
Plate-like vdW ferromagnetic crystal Fe3GaTe2, with typical lateral sizes up to ~2 × 3 mm (inset in Fig. 1b), is grown by the self-flux method (see Methods). Fe3GaTe2 has hexagonal structure of space group P63/mmc (a = b = 3.9860 Å, c = 16.2290 Å, α = β = 90°, γ = 120°). In Fe3GaTe2 crystal, the Fe3Ga heterometallic slab is sandwiched between two Te layers, and the vdW gap is between two adjacent Te atoms. The slabs of Fe3GaTe2 are stacked along the c axis with the interlayer spacing ~0.78 nm (Fig. 1a). As shown in Fig. 1b, the X-ray diffraction (XRD) of as-grown Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystal shows typical (00 l) orientation with narrow full width at half maximum (FWHM, 0.03°), suggesting the strict orientation growth and high crystallinity. Figure 1c shows an atomically-thin Fe3GaTe2 few-layer nanosheet with 2.7 nm (3 layers) thickness isolated on SiO2/Si substrate by Scotch tape. The triangular shape with 60° 2D crystal outline are common in some 2D crystals of hexagonal structures16. Moreover, Raman spectra for Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets with different thickness all only exhibit lattice vibration modes A1 (~128 cm−1) and E2 (~144 cm−1) of Te atoms (Supplementary Fig. 1), which are usually observed in other 2D telluride compounds17. Compared with the typical Raman spectra of Te thin film (A1 at ~122 cm−1 and E2 at ~142 cm−1), the slightly right-shift of A1 and E2 may attribute to the uniaxial strains result from the introduction of Fe3Ga heterometallic slab18.
Figure 1d, e and Supplementary Fig. 2a show the dark-field field-emission transmission electron microscopy (FTEM) images and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) spectra of the Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets. The atomic ratio of Fe, Ga and Te are 2.94 ± 0.05:1.03 ± 0.06:1.91 ± 0.01, which very close to the 3:1:2 stoichiometry. Meanwhile, we also compare the atomic ratio of Fe, Ga and Te through XPS and obtain similar stoichiometric atomic ratios (Supplementary Table 1). Further, EDS mapping images exhibit uniform distribution of Fe, Ga and Te (Fig. 1f and Supplementary Fig. 2b). Figure 1g and Supplementary Fig. 2c show high-resolution TEM image on two different Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets. Clear (110) and (1\(\bar{2}\)0) lattice planes can be identified, which both exhibit the same interplanar spacing of ~0.206 nm owing to the six-fold rotational symmetry (Fig. 1h and Supplementary Fig. 2d). Moreover, the selected-area electron diffraction (SAED) presents single crystal nature with two-fold hexagonal diffraction spots. According to the XPS spectra, the valance states of Fe, Ga and Te in Fe3GaTe2 are determined to be Fe0, Fe3+, Ga2− and Te2−, respectively (Supplementary Fig. 3, more discussions in Supplementary Note 1). Different from the Fe2+ and Fe3+ in Fe3GeTe2 crystals with typical bulk TC ~205 K12, the above-room-temperature ferromagnetism in Fe3GaTe2 may cause from the Fe0 and high-spin states Fe3+.
Ferromagnetic properties and room-temperature magnetic anisotropy of Fe3GaTe2 crystals
The ferromagnetic properties of Fe3GaTe2 crystals are examined by vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM) in both out-of-plane and in-plane configurations. Figure 2a shows the temperature-dependent tests (M-T) under spontaneous magnetization regime without external magnetic field (B = 0, see Methods). The Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals exhibit a typical ferromagnetic transition behavior and TC up to ~367 K. Meanwhile, the zero-field-cooling (ZFC) and field-cooling (FC) tests under a magnetic field of 0.1 T (Fig. 2b) also show a typical ferromagnetic feature, further demonstrating the ferromagnetic nature in Fe3GaTe2. Specially, typical magnetic field-dependent (M-H) hysteresis loops are acquired from the out-of-plane orientation while vanish under the in-plane orientation in Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals (Fig. 2c, d). The significant difference between out-of-plane and in-plane M-H curves proves the out-of-plane easy axis (Supplementary Fig. 4), and a strong PMA of the magnetization with a large Ku of ~4.79 × 105 J/m3 is observed at 300 K (more discussions in Supplementary Note 2). The Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals also exhibit the relative large coercivity (HC) 1014 Oe at 3 K and small HC 249 Oe at 300 K. Additionally, the Msat of Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals is 57.18 emu/g (1.68 μB/Fe) at 3 K and remains 40.11 emu/g (1.18 μB/Fe) at 300 K (Supplementary Table 2). Compared with other intrinsic vdW ferromagnetic crystals such as CrI3, Cr2Ge2Te6 and Fe3GeTe2, the Fe3GaTe2 combines record-high TC, large room-temperature Msat and large room-temperature PMA (Fig. 2e and Supplementary Table 3), which is a powerful candidate for room-temperature 2D ferromagnetic platform for next-generation spintronic devices.
In addition to the large room-temperature PMA in Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals, the room-temperature magnetic anisotropy of Fe3GaTe2 few-layer nanosheet (9.5 nm) is investigated by angle-dependent AHE (Fig. 2f). When a perpendicular magnetic field (θB = 90°) is applied, the field-dependent anomalous Hall resistance (Rxy-B) curve presents nearly square hysteresis loop, indicating an out-of-plane magnetic anisotropy (Fig. 2g). With the decrease of θB from 90° to 0°, the Rxy changes from an uptrend (for example, θB = 90°) to a downtrend (for example, θB = 30°) with the magnetic field in the high filed regime (B > 1 T), and eventually almost disappears (θB = 0°). Since the Rxy is only proportional to the out-of-plane component of magnetization, the results suggest that the magnetization is pinned in the out-of-plane direction at small magnetic field, and is pulled towards the in-plane direction only in the high field regime12. Further, the Ku is estimated ~3.88 × 105 J/m3 by fitting the data of θB and θM, where θM is the tilt angle between the magnetization and the sample plane (Inset in Fig. 2g, more discussions in Supplementary Note 2). Meanwhile, θM is always larger than θB which implies the magnetization is always tends to the out-of-plane direction regardless of the direction of the magnetic field, indicating a strong PMA in this few-layer Fe3GaTe2. The robust large Ku in Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals and 2D few-layer nanosheet at room temperature is not only better than the conventional widely-used ferromagnetic thin films like CoFeB and Co2FeAl1, 19, but also an order of magnitude larger than other vdW ferromagnetic crystals such as Cr-CrTe2 (7.6 × 104 J/m3) and CrTe2 (4.9 × 104 J/m3)10, 20 (Fig. 2h and Supplementary Table 4). Such robust large room-temperature PMA in Fe3GaTe2 will be vital to the realization of stable, compact vdW 2D heterostructures-based spintronic devices.
Magneto-transport measurements and anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in single-sheet 2D Fe3GaTe2 crystals
The above-room-temperature single-sheet intrinsic ferromagnetism in 2D Fe3GaTe2 is revealed by AHE based on Hall devices (Fig. 3a). Figure 3b shows a representative Fe3GaTe2 Hall device with sample thickness identified as 9.5 nm. The paramagnetism-ferromagnetism phase transition (Supplementary Fig. 6) and metallic behavior, which resistance decreases with decreasing temperature, are observed in Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets (Fig. 3c). As the thickness is reduced, the Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets become more insulating (Fig. 3c), but room-temperature ferromagnetism still exists. Unambiguous evidence comes from the clear hysteresis in Rxy-B curves for five Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets (include 9.5, 19, 23, 42 and 112 nm nanosheets) at 3 K and 300 K (Fig. 3d, e). Their rectangular hysteresis loops with near-vertical jumps indicate the strong PMA and large thickness-dependent HC from 1.16 T to 0.36 T (Supplementary Fig. 7). For example, HC in 9.5 nm Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet is 3.2 times that in 112 nm nanosheet. Moreover, we observe the p-type conductive characteristics and evaluate the effect of thermal fluctuations on ferromagnetism by the temperature-dependent AHE in Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets, which is gradually weakened and eventually disappear above TC (Supplementary Fig. 8a–d). Notably, high-temperature AHE reveals the robust above-room-temperature long-range ferromagnetic order in even 9.5 nm few-layer Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet (Fig. 3f, additional low-temperature AHE data in Supplementary Fig. 9). The TC of Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets is determined by remanent Hall resistance at zero magnetic field, Rrxy = Rxy | B=0, as a function of temperature (Fig. 3 g, more discussions in Supplementary Note 3). Analysis of five Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets indicates that TC decreases monotonically with thickness reduced, from ~380 K for a 112 nm nanosheet to ~350 K for a 9.5 nm few-layer nanosheet, consistent with the bulk TC in VSM (more discussions in Supplementary Note 3). In any case, 2D vdW Fe3GaTe2 crystals exhibit an intrinsic above-room-temperature ferromagnetism with TC ~350–380 K by single-sheet AHE measurements.
In addition to the thickness effect of magneto-transport in 2D Fe3GaTe2, the room-temperature conductivity (σ), carrier density (n), mobility (μ), normal Hall coefficient (R0), and anomalous Hall coefficient (Rs) in the representative 9.5 nm Fe3GaTe2 few-layer nanosheet are calculated as 789.30 S cm−1, 2.03 × 1022 cm−3, 0.24 cm2 V−1 s−1, 3.09 × 10−4 cm3 C−1, and 0.23 cm3 C−1, respectively (Supplementary Table 5). With the reduction of the temperature, the carrier density monotonously increases and mobility monotonously decreases (Supplementary Fig. 10a). Furthermore, the value of R0 decreases steadily with the decrease of temperature (Supplementary Fig. 10b), which is consistent with the temperature-sensitive carrier density21. In contrast, the Rs shows a non-monotonic variation with temperature, and reaches a maximum at a certain temperature. Similar temperature dependence of Rs have also been reported in ferromagnetic La1-xCaxMnO3, Fe3GeTe2, and Mn5Si321,22,23. Meanwhile, Rs is about three orders of magnitude larger than R0, and about two orders of magnitude larger than pure Fe and Ni24, 25. In addition, as shown in Supplementary Fig. 11, the magneto-transport measurement of a 178 nm Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet is presented. Combining longitudinal resistivity (ρxx) and anomalous Hall resistivity (ρxy) data (Supplementary Fig. 11a, b), the temperature-dependent anomalous Hall conductivity (σAH) and anomalous Hall angle (θAH) are plotted in Supplementary Fig. 11c, d (more discussions in Supplementary Note 3). The maximum σAH and θAH are determined as 73.25 Ω−1 cm−1 and 6.1 % at 3 K, respectively. Notably, the θAH persists 3% at room temperature. Such large room temperature θAH is comparable to θAH of other classical ferromagnetic materials such as Fe and (Ga, Mn)As, and much larger than that of other vdW ferromagnetic crystals9, 26, 27 (Supplementary Table 6).
Room-temperature direct magnetic domain imaging without external magnetic field in single Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet
The formation of magnetic domains in ferromagnets is the result of the equilibrium distribution of spontaneous magnetization satisfying the minimum energy principle28. In this work, magnetic domain structure and ferromagnetism of single-sheet Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets with different thickness are directly imaged by magnetic force microscopy (MFM) at room temperature without external magnetic field (see Methods). The strong room-temperature MFM signals compared with SiO2/Si substrate can be detected even when the MFM scanning plane 250 nm above the surface of Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets, which represents an attractive interaction between Fe3GaTe2 and MFM tip, and indicates the strong spontaneous magnetization of Fe3GaTe2 2D crystals at room temperature (Fig. 4a–c and Supplementary Fig. 12). This result provides additional persuasive evidence of room-temperature strong intrinsic ferromagnetism in the Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet. Notably, the Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets of different thickness show two kinds of magnetic domain structures: multi, stripe-domain in thicker nanosheets and single-domain in 16–28 nm thin nanosheets. The multi, stripe-domain in Fe3GaTe2 nanosheet resembles the stripe-domain phase in perpendicularly magnetized ferromagnetic thin films29, 30 and vdW ferromagnetic crystals Fe3GeTe2 and Cr2Ge2Te631, 32. The formation of the multi, stripe-domains in Fe3GaTe2 implies the dominant contribution of dipolar interaction over exchange interaction and magnetic anisotropy in Fe3GaTe231. For 16–28 nm Fe3GaTe2 thin nanosheets, dipole interaction gradually lose its dominance, and thus the multi, stripe-domain gradually transform to single-domain. Moreover, the MFM phase angle for the bare substrate (SiO2/Si), 16, 18 and 28 nm thin nanosheets can be distinguished even to the side width of the selected regions down to 60 nm (Fig. 4d), suggesting the nanoscale resolution ability of ferromagnetism in MFM images of this work.
First-principles calculations of spin-resolved electronic structures in 2D Fe3GaTe2 crystals
To gain more insight into the nature of the intrinsic room-temperature ferromagnetism in Fe3GaTe2, the spin-resolved electronic structure of bulk, trilayer and monolayer Fe3GaTe2 have been studied by using first-principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations (Supplementary Figs. 13 and 14). The metallic feature are presented in both spin channels of all calculated Fe3GaTe2 crystals, which can be seen from the two bands crossing the Fermi level together with a finite DOS at the Fermi level (Supplementary Fig. 13b). In addition, the total spin-resolved DOS shows apparent asymmetry between spin-up (↑) and spin-down (↓) channels, which is consistent with the observed intrinsic ferromagnetism in Fe3GaTe2. The spin-splitting of spin-up and spin-down electronic states in band structure further confirm the intrinsic ferromagnetism (Supplementary Fig. 14a–c). For the negligible magnetic moment of Ga and Te atoms in Fe3GaTe2, the ferromagnetism mainly comes from the Fe atoms, and causes the asymmetrical electronic structure around the Fermi level. Further analysis of the Fe atom contribution reveals that its 3d-orbital electrons mostly contribute to the Fe DOS (Supplementary Fig. 13c–e) and thus, total DOS for both spin-up and spin-down channel. Notably, the partial spin-resolved DOS for the Fe-I and Fe-II atoms are rather different, being consistent with the rather different magnetic moments on these sites (Supplementary Table 7). These differences are caused by their different local environments in crystal lattice (Supplementary Fig. 13a). With the reduction of the thickness, the metallic feature, spin-resolved DOS around Fermi level and magnetic moment of Fe3GaTe2 almost unchanged, and most contribution to DOS is still from Fe atoms and their 3d-orbital electrons. These calculated results are consistent with the observed temperature-dependent longitudinal resistance and robust TC in 2D Fe3GaTe2 few-layer nanosheet, and stable intrinsic ferromagnetic properties caused by robust large PMA.
Discussion
We have successfully prepared 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystal Fe3GaTe2 with both intrinsic strong above-room-temperature ferromagnetism and robust large PMA. The Fe3GaTe2 2D ferromagnetic crystals show TC up to record-high ~380 K for known intrinsic vdW ferromagnetic crystals with high Msat 40.11 emu/g (1.18 μB/Fe) at 300 K. Notably, vdW Fe3GaTe2 shows robust large PMA which Ku up to ~4.79 × 105 J/m3 for bulk crystals and ~3.88×105 J/m3 for 2D nanosheet, better than some widely-used conventional ferromagnetic films such as CoFeB and Co2FeAl, and one order of magnitude larger than other 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystals. Furthermore, thickness-dependent above-room-temperature AHE in 2D vdW Fe3GaTe2 are realized with thickness down to below 10 nm. The large room-temperature anomalous Hall angle and anomalous Hall coefficient of Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets are comparable with most used traditional ferromagnetic film and much larger than known 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystals. Finally, room-temperature direct magnetic domain imaging by MFM has been realized in Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets with different thickness. This work presents a 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystal combining intrinsic above-room-temperature strong ferromagnetism and robust large PMA, and opens up new opportunities for next-generation magnetoelectronics and spintronics based on 2D vdW ferromagnetic crystals and various vdW heterostructures.
Methods
Fe3GaTe2 single crystal growth
High-quality Fe3GaTe2 single crystals were grown via a self-flux method. High purity Fe powders (Aladdin, 99.99%), Ga lumps (Aladdin, 99.9999%), and Te powders (Aladdin, 99.99%) in the molar ratio of 1:1:2 were placed in an evacuated quartz tube and sealed. A mixture was first heated to 1273 K within 1 h, and held for 24 h for solid reactions. Then the temperature was quickly decrease down to 1153 K within 1 h followed by slowly cooled down to 1053 K within 100 h.
Crystal characterizations
The phase, morphology, and crystal structures of Fe3GaTe2 crystals were performed by optical microscopy (OM, MV6100), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS, AXIS SUPRA+), powder X-ray diffraction (XRD, Smartlab SE, Rigaku Corporation; D8 ADVANCE, Brucker) with Cu Kα radiation (wavelength = 0.154 nm) and Raman spectroscopy (LabRAM HR800, Horiba Jobin-Yvon) with excitation wavelength of 532 nm. The thickness was measured by the atomic force microscopy (AFM, XE7, Park; SPM9700, Shimadzu; Dimension EDGE, Bruker). The microstructure, morphology and molar ratio were investigated using field-emission transmission electron spectroscopy (FTEM-1, Talos F200x, FEI; FTEM-2, Tecnai G2 F30, FEI) equipped with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). All the above tests were carried out at room temperature.
Magnetization measurements
The ferromagnetic properties of Fe3GaTe2 bulk crystals were measured by a physical property measurement system (PPMS DynaCool, Quantum Design, USA) equipped with a vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM). For the spontaneous magnetization tests, the samples were firstly heated to 400 K (above the sample’s TC) and hold for 5 min. Then, in order to remove the remanence of the samples and the superconducting coil, the magnetic field was raised to 2 T and decreased to 0 with oscillated mode. After that, the temperature was reduced to 3 K without external magnetic field (B = 0 T), and the magnetic moment test was carried out during the cooling process by VSM. For M-T curves, the rate of temperature change was set as 2 K min−1 with the interval of 1 K. For M-H curves, the rate of magnetic field change was set as 100 Oe s−1 with the interval of 500 Oe. 200 times per point were recorded for average in both M-T and M-H curves.
Device fabrication and magneto-transport measurements
A standard Hall bar electrode of Cr/Au (10/20 nm) was pre-fabricated on a 300 nm oxidized layer SiO2/Si substrate by using laser direct writing machine (MicroWriter ML3, DMO), e-beam evaporation (PD-500S, PDVACUUM) and lift-off. Then, mechanically exfoliated Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets were transferred onto the Hall bar pattern by using the polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) stamp. To avoid degradation, a larger exfoliated mica flake was transferred to cover the Fe3GaTe2 nanosheets. Finally, the device is annealed in a high vacuum annealing furnace at 473 K for 1 h to form a reliable contact. All the exfoliating and transfer process were done in the Ar-filled glove box (H2O, O2 < 0.1 ppm).
The electrical transport properties were measured in a physical property measurement system (PPMS, DynaCool, Quantum Design) with a four-terminal configuration using silver electrodes. The magnetic field was applied perpendicular to the sample plane expect of the angle-dependent Hall resistance measurement. The resistance is tested 25 times at each temperature or magnetic field sampling point for an average with a constant current mode.
Magnetic force microscopy measurements
The single-sheet MFM measurements were presented by the atomic force microscopy (AFM, XE7, Park) equipped with the commercial magnetic Co-Al tip (Multi75M-G, BudgetSensors). The force constant and resonance frequency of this tip are ~3 N/m and ~75 kHz, respectively. The Co-Al tip was first magnetized by a permanent magnet before the MFM measurements. MFM images were taken in a constant height mode with the scanning plane ~250 nm above its original height to eliminate the interference of short-range atomic forces. All MFM tests were performed at room temperature without external magnetic field.
Theoretical calculation
The density functional theory (DFT)-based first-principles calculations were done by the Vienna Ab-initio Simulation Package (VASP)33 code with the projector-augmented wave pseudopotential method. The Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof (PBE)34 generalized gradient approximation (GGA)35 was performed to address the exchange and correlation effects. A slab model of the Fe3GaTe2 was adopted, and the elimination of the interactions between the slabs was achieved by a 20 Å vacuum layer along the z-axis. For trilayer Fe3GaTe2, we incorporated the long-range vdW interactions (DFT-D3 method)36 to correct its total energy. The Monkhorst–Pack method37 was used for Brillouin zone sampling. The 15 × 15 × 3 and 15 × 15 × 1 k-point meshes were adopted to relax the bulk and monolayer (trilayer) Fe3GaTe2, respectively. We extend the wave functions to a plane-wave basis with a 400 eV cutoff energy. The energy convergence step is set as 10−5 eV. The maximum Hellmann-Feyman force after ionic relaxation is less than 0.01 eV/Å on each atom. The Gaussian smearing with smearing width of 0.1 eV was adopted for processing the partial occupancies of each wave function.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
This work was partly funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2016YFB0700702), the Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Committee (JCYJ20210324142010030), National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 51402118, 51502101, 61674063), Guangxi Scientific Base & Talent Special Project (AD20297084) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2021yjsCXCY055). The Raman, XPS and AFM tests from Analytical and Testing Center in Huazhong University of Science and Technology are acknowledged.
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G.Z. and F.G. contributed equally to this work. H.C. designed the project. G.Z. and H.W. prepared the materials and fabricated the devices. G.Z., X.W., L.Y. and W.J. did the crystal characterizations and physical properties tests. F.G. did the theoretical calculations. H.C., W.Z. and G.Z. analyzed the results. H.C. and G.Z. wrote the paper.
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Zhang, G., Guo, F., Wu, H. et al. Above-room-temperature strong intrinsic ferromagnetism in 2D van der Waals Fe3GaTe2 with large perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Nat Commun 13, 5067 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32605-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32605-5
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