Magnetism-induced band-edge shift as mechanism for magnetoconductance in CrPS$_4$ transistors

arXiv (Cornell University)(2023)

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Abstract
Transistors realized on 2D antiferromagnetic semiconductor CrPS$_4$ exhibit large magnetoconductance, due to magnetic-field-induced changes in magnetic state. The microscopic mechanism coupling conductance and magnetic state is not understood. We identify it by analyzing the evolution of the parameters determining the transistor behavior -- carrier mobility and threshold voltage -- with temperature and magnetic field. For temperatures T near the N\'eel temperature $T_N$, the magnetoconductance originates from a mobility increase due to the applied magnetic field that reduces spin fluctuation induced disorder. For $T << T_N$, instead, what changes is the threshold voltage, so that increasing the field at fixed gate voltage increases the density of accumulated electrons. The phenomenon is explained by a conduction band-edge shift correctly predicted by \emph{ab-initio} calculations. Our results demonstrate that the bandstructure of CrPS$_4$ depends on its magnetic state and reveal a mechanism for magnetoconductance that had not been identified earlier.
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Key words
magnetoconductance,magnetism-induced,band-edge
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