Scientists Just Discovered a New Type of Magnetism
Scientists Just Discovered a New Type of Magnetism
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In an atomically thin stack of semiconductors, a mechanism unseen in any natural substance causes electrons’ spins to align.
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Scientists Just Discovered a New Type of Magnetism
In an atomically thin stack of semiconductors, a mechanism unseen in any natural substance causes electrons’ spins to align.
Abstract: Magnetic properties of materials ranging from conventional ferromagnetic metals to strongly correlated materials such as cuprates originate from Coulomb exchange interactions. The existence of alternate mechanisms for magnetism that could naturally facilitate electrical control has been discussed theoretically, but an experimental demonstration in an extended system has been missing. Here we investigate MoSe2/WS2 van der Waals heterostructures in the vicinity of Mott insulator states of electrons forming a frustrated triangular lattice and observe direct evidence of magnetic correlations originating from a kinetic mechanism. By directly measuring electronic magnetization through the strength of the polarization-selective attractive polaron resonance, we find that when the Mott state is electron-doped, the system exhibits ferromagnetic correlations in agreement with the Nagaoka mechanism.
Ciorciaro et al. 2023 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06633-0
Nanoscale boundary condition phenomenon, nothing to see here.