4 research outputs found
Intrinsic spin Hall torque in a moire Chern magnet
In spin torque magnetic memories, electrically actuated spin currents are
used to switch a magnetic bit. Typically, these require a multilayer geometry
including both a free ferromagnetic layer and a second layer providing spin
injection. For example, spin may be injected by a nonmagnetic layer exhibiting
a large spin Hall effect, a phenomenon known as spin-orbit torque. Here, we
demonstrate a spin-orbit torque magnetic bit in a single two-dimensional system
with intrinsic magnetism and strong Berry curvature. We study AB-stacked
MoTe2/WSe2, which hosts a magnetic Chern insulator at a carrier density of one
hole per moire superlattice site. We observe hysteretic switching of the
resistivity as a function of applied current. Magnetic imaging using a
superconducting quantum interference device reveals that current switches
correspond to reversals of individual magnetic domains. The real space pattern
of domain reversals aligns precisely with spin accumulation measured near the
high-Berry curvature Hubbard band edges. This suggests that intrinsic spin- or
valley-Hall torques drive the observed current-driven magnetic switching in
both MoTe2/WSe2 and other moire materials. The switching current density of
10^3 Amps per square centimeter is significantly less than reported in other
platforms paving the way for efficient control of magnetic order
Intervalley coherence and intrinsic spin-orbit coupling in rhombohedral trilayer graphene
Rhombohedral graphene multilayers provide a clean and highly reproducible
platform to explore the emergence of superconductivity and magnetism in a
strongly interacting electron system. Here, we use electronic compressibility
and local magnetometry to explore the phase diagram of this material class in
unprecedented detail. We focus on rhombohedral trilayer in the quarter metal
regime, where the electronic ground state is characterized by the occupation of
a single spin and valley isospin flavor. Our measurements reveal a subtle
competition between valley imbalanced (VI) orbital ferromagnets and intervalley
coherent (IVC) states in which electron wave functions in the two momentum
space valleys develop a macroscopically coherent relative phase. Contrasting
the in-plane spin susceptibility of the IVC and VI phases reveals the influence
of graphene's intrinsic spin-orbit coupling, which drives the emergence of a
distinct correlated phase with hybrid VI and IVC character. Spin-orbit also
suppresses the in-plane magnetic susceptibility of the VI phase, which allows
us to extract the spin-orbit coupling strength of eV for
our hexagonal boron nitride-encapsulated graphene system. We discuss the
implications of finite spin-orbit coupling on the spin-triplet superconductors
observed in both rhombohedral and twisted graphene multilayers