Microscopy aided detection of the self-intercalation mechanism and in situ electronic properties in chromium selenide.
Jinding ZhangYulong XiaoKaihui LiYing ChenSonglong LiuWenjie LuoXueying LiuShiying LiuYiliu WangSi-Yu LiAnlian PanPublished in: Nanoscale (2024)
Two-dimensional (2D) chromium-based self-intercalated materials Cr 1+ n X 2 (0 ≤ n ≤ 1, X = S, Se, Te) have attracted much attention because of their tunable magnetism with good environmental stability. Intriguingly, the magnetic and electrical properties of the materials can be effectively tuned by altering the coverage and spatial arrangement of the intercalated Cr (ic-Cr) within the van der Waals gap, contributing to different stoichiometries. Several different Cr 1+ n X 2 systems have been widely investigated recently; however, those with the same stoichiometric ratio (such as Cr 1.25 Te 2 ) were reported to exhibit disparate magnetic properties, which still lacks explanation. Therefore, a systematic in situ study of the mechanisms with microscopy techniques is in high demand to look into the origin of these discrepancies. Herein, 2D self-intercalated Cr 1+ n Se 2 nanoflakes were synthesized as a platform to conduct the characterization. Combining scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), we studied in depth the microscopic structure and local electronic properties of the Cr 1+ n Se 2 nanoflakes. The self-intercalation mechanism of ic-Cr and local stoichiometric-ratio variation in a Cr 1+ n Se 2 ultrathin nanoflake is clearly detected at the nanometer scale. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) measurements indicate that Cr 1.5 Se 2 /Cr 2 Se 2 and Cr 1.25 Se 2 exhibit conductive and semiconductive behaviors, respectively. The STM tip manipulation method is further applied to manipulate the microstructure of Cr 1+ n Se 2 , which successfully produces clean zigzag-type boundaries. Our systematic microscopy study paves the way for the in-depth study of the magnetic mechanism of 2D self-intercalated magnets at the nano/micro scale and the development of new magnetic and spintronic devices.