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Layer-controlled evolution of electron state in the silicene intercalation compound SrSi 2 .

Oleg E ParfenovAlexander N TaldenkovDmitry V AveryanovIvan S SokolovOleg A KondratevMikhail M BorisovSergey N YakuninIgor A KarateevAndrey M TokmachevVyacheslav G Storchak
Published in: Materials horizons (2022)
Silicene, a Si-based analogue of graphene, holds a high promise for electronics because of its exceptional properties but a high chemical reactivity makes it a very challenging material to work with. The silicene lattice can be stabilized by active metals to form stoichiometric compounds MSi 2 . Being candidate topological semimetals, these materials provide an opportunity to probe layer dependence of unconventional electronic structures. It is demonstrated here that in the silicene compound SrSi 2 , the number of monolayers controls the electronic state. A series of films ranging from bulk-like multilayers down to a single monolayer have been synthesized on silicon and characterized with a combination of techniques - from electron and X-ray diffraction to high-resolution electron microscopy. Transport measurements reveal evolution of the chiral anomaly in bulk SrSi 2 to weak localization in ultrathin films down to 3 monolayers followed by 3D and 2D strong localization in 2 and 1 monolayers, respectively. The results outline the range of stability of the chiral state, important for practical applications, and shed light on the localization phenomena in the limit of a few monolayers.
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