Natural superlattice structures (MnBi2βTe4β)(Bi2βTe3β)nβ (n = 1,
2,...), in which magnetic MnBi2βTe4β layers are separated by nonmagnetic
Bi2βTe3β layers, hold band topology, magnetism and reduced interlayer
coupling, providing a promising platform for the realization of exotic
topological quantum states. However, their magnetism in the two-dimensional
limit, which is crucial for further exploration of quantum phenomena, remains
elusive. Here, complex ferromagnetic (FM)-antiferromagnetic (AFM) coexisting
ground states that persist up to the 2-septuple layers (SLs) limit are observed
and comprehensively investigated in MnBi4βTe7β (n = 1) and
MnBi6βTe10β (n = 2). The ubiquitous Mn-Bi site mixing modifies or
even changes the sign of the subtle inter-SL magnetic interactions, yielding a
spatially inhomogeneous interlayer coupling. Further, a tunable exchange bias
effect is observed in (MnBi2βTe4β)(Bi2βTe3β)nβ (n = 1, 2), arising
from the coupling between the FM and AFM components in the ground state. Our
work highlights a new approach toward the fine-tuning of magnetism and paves
the way for further study of quantum phenomena in
(MnBi2βTe4β)(Bi2βTe3β)nβ (n = 1, 2,...) as well as their magnetic
applications.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure