A recent experiment reported type-II multiferroicity in monolayer (ML)
NiI2โ based on a presumed spiral magnetic configuration (Spiral-B), which
is, as we found here, under debate in the ML limit. Freestanding ML NiI2โ
breaks its C3โ symmetry, as it prefers a striped antiferromagnetic order
(AABB-AFM) along with an intralayer antiferroelectric (AFE) order. However,
substrate confinement may preserve the C3โ symmetry and/or apply tensile
strain to the ML. This leads to another spiral magnetic order (Spiral-IVX),
while 2L shows a different order (Spiral-VY) and Spiral-B dominates in
thicker layers. Thus, three multiferroic phases, namely, Spiral-B+FE,
Spiral-IVX +FE, Spiral-VY+FE, and an anti-multiferroic AABB-AFM+AFE one,
show layer-thickness-dependent and geometry-dependent dominance, ascribed to
competitions among thickness-dependent Kitaev, biquadratic, and Heisenberg
spin-exchange interactions and single-ion magnetic anisotropy. Our theoretical
results clarify the debate on the multiferroicity of ML NiI2โ and shed
light on the role of layer-stacking-induced changes in noncollinear
spin-exchange interactions and magnetic anisotropy in thickness-dependent
magnetism.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures and an SI file of 25 pages appende