Date19th, Sep 2020

Summary:

Australian researchers and their colleagues from Russia and China have shown that it is possible to study the magnetic properties of ultrathin materials directly, via a new microscopy technique that o...

Full text:

Home > Press > Nano-microscope gives first direct observation of the magnetic properties of 2D materials: Discovery means new class of materials and technologies

New diamond-based nano-microscope opens up potential for 2D materials.

CREDIT
David A. Broadway New diamond-based nano-microscope opens up potential for 2D materials. CREDIT David A. Broadway

Abstract: Australian researchers and their colleagues from Russia and China have shown that it is possible to study the magnetic properties of ultrathin materials directly, via a new microscopy technique that opens the door to the discovery of more two-dimensional (2D) magnetic materials, with all sorts of potential applications.

Melbourne, Australia | Posted on September 18th, 2020

Published in the journal Advanced Materials, the findings are significant because current techniques used to characterise normal (three-dimensional) magnets don't work on 2D materials such as graphene due to their extremely small size - a few atom thick.

"So far there has been no way to tell exactly how strongly magnetic a 2D material was," said Dr Jean-Philippe Tetienne from the University of Melbourne School of Physics and Centre for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology.

"That is, if you were to place the 2D material on your fridge's door like a regular fridge magnet, how strongly it gets stuck onto it. This is the most important property of a magnet."

To address the problem, the team, led by Professor Lloyd Hollenberg, employed a widefield nitrogen-vacancy microscope, a tool they recently developed that has the necessary sensitivity and spatial resolution to measure the strength of 2D material.

"In essence, the technique works by bringing tiny magnetic sensors (so-called nitrogen-vacancy centres, which are atomic defects in a piece of diamond) extremely close to the 2D material in order to sense its magnetic field," Professor Hollenberg explained.

To test the technique, the scientists chose to study vanadium triiodide (VI3) as large 3D chunks of VI3 were already known to be strongly magnetic.

Using their special microscope, they have now shown that 2D sheets of VI3 are also magnetic but about twice as weak as in the 3D form. In other words, it would be twice as easy to get them off the fridge's door.

"This was a bit of a surprise, and we are currently trying to understand why the magnetisation is weaker in 2D, which will be important for applications," Dr Tetienne said.

Professor Artem Oganov of Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) in Moscow said the findings have the potential to trigger new technology.

"Just a few years ago, scientists doubted that two-dimensional-magnets are possible at all. With the discovery of two-dimensional ferromagnetic VI3, a new exciting class of materials emerged. New classes of material always mean that new technologies will appear, both for studying such materials and harnessing their properties."

The international team now plan to use their microscope to study other 2D magnetic materials as well as more complex structures, including those that are expected to play a key role in future energy-efficient electronics.

###

Other organizations involved in the research include University of Basel, RMIT University, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Northwestern Polytechnical University, and Renmin University of China.

####

For more information, please click here

Contacts:Lito Vilisoni Wilson

61-466-867-909

@unimelb

Copyright © University of Melbourne

If you have a comment, please Contact us.

Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.

Bookmark: Delicious Digg Newsvine Google Yahoo Reddit Magnoliacom Furl Facebook

RELATED JOURNAL ARTICLE:

News and information

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022

2 Dimensional Materials

Controlled synthesis of crystal flakes paves path for advanced future electronics June 17th, 2022

Solving the puzzle of 2D disorder: An interdisciplinary team developed a new method to characterize disorder in 2D materials June 17th, 2022

UBCO researchers change the game when it comes to activity tracking: Flexible, highly sensitive motion device created by extrusion printing June 17th, 2022

Bumps could smooth quantum investigations: Rice University models show unique properties of 2D materials stressed by contoured substrates June 10th, 2022

UCI scientists turn a hydrogen molecule into a quantum sensor: New technique enables precise measurement of electrostatic properties of materials April 22nd, 2022

Magnetism/Magnons

�Nanomagnetic� computing can provide low-energy AI, researchers show May 6th, 2022

'Frustrated' nanomagnets order themselves through disorder: Interactions between alternating layers of exotic, 2D material create 'entropy-driven order' in a structured system of magnets at equilibrium April 8th, 2022

Imaging

Snapshot measurement of single nanostructure�s circular dichroism March 25th, 2022

Better understanding superconductors with Higgs spectroscopy Prof. Stefan Kaiser from TU Dresden awarded ERC Consolidator Grant March 18th, 2022

Turning any camera into a polarization camera: Metasurface attachment can be used with almost any optical system, from machine vision cameras to telescopes March 18th, 2022

Visualizing the invisible: New fluorescent DNA label reveals nanoscopic cancer features March 4th, 2022

Govt.-Legislation/Regulation/Funding/Policy

Solving the solar energy storage problem with rechargeable batteries that can convert and store energy at once June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022

UBCO researchers change the game when it comes to activity tracking: Flexible, highly sensitive motion device created by extrusion printing June 17th, 2022

University of Illinois Chicago joins Brookhaven Lab's Quantum Center June 10th, 2022

Possible Futures

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022

Chip Technology

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022

Controlled synthesis of crystal flakes paves path for advanced future electronics June 17th, 2022

Discoveries

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022

Materials/Metamaterials

Nanotubes: a promising solution for advanced rubber cables with 60% less conductive filler June 1st, 2022

New route to build materials out of tiny particles May 27th, 2022

A one-stop shop for quantum sensing materials May 27th, 2022

When a band falls flat: Searching for flatness in materials: International collaboration, led by DIPC and Princeton, creates a catalogue of materials that could impact quantum technologies April 1st, 2022

Announcements

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022

Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters

Quantum network nodes with warm atoms June 24th, 2022

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Tools

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Snapshot measurement of single nanostructure�s circular dichroism March 25th, 2022

Eyebrow-raising: Researchers reveal why nanowires stick to each other February 11th, 2022

JEOL Introduces New Scanning Electron Microscope with �Simple SEM� Automation and Live Elemental and 3D Analysis January 14th, 2022

Grants/Sponsored Research/Awards/Scholarships/Gifts/Contests/Honors/Records

Solving the solar energy storage problem with rechargeable batteries that can convert and store energy at once June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Advances in lithium niobate photonics: High performance integrated LN-based photonic devices have developed rapidly in recent years, and many different structures have been demonstrated for various application scenarios�are we about to enter a new era of LN photonics? June 24th, 2022

Boron nitride nanotube fibers get real: Rice lab creates first heat-tolerant, stable fibers from wet-spinning process June 24th, 2022