posted on 2024-11-06, 16:18authored byEleanor
M. Clements, Dmitry Ovchinnikov, Parul R. Raghuvanshi, Valentino R. Cooper, Satoshi Okamoto, Andrew D. Christianson, Joseph A. M. Paddison, Brenden R. Ortiz, Stuart Calder, Andrew F. May, Xiaodong Xu, Jiaqiang Yan, Michael A. McGuire
Cleavable metallic antiferromagnets may be of use for
low-dissipation
spintronic devices; however, few are currently known. Here we present
orthorhombic MnRhBi3 as one such compound and present a
thorough study of its physical properties. Exfoliation is demonstrated
experimentally, and the cleavage energy and electronic structure are
examined by density functional theory calculations. It is concluded
that MnRhBi3 is a van der Waals-layered material that cleaves
easily between neighboring Bi layers and that the Bi atoms have lone
pairs extending into the van der Waals gaps. A series of four phase
transitions are observed below room temperature, and neutron diffraction
shows that at least two of the transitions involve the formation of
antiferromagnetic order. Anomalous thermal expansion points to a crystallographic
phase transition and/or strong magnetoelastic coupling. This work
reveals a complex phase evolution in MnRhBi3 and establishes
this cleavable antiferromagnetic metal as an interesting material
for studying the interplay of structure, magnetism, and transport
in the bulk and ultrathin limits, as well as the role of lone pair
electrons in interface chemistry and proximity effects in van der
Waals heterostructures.