Prediction of high Curie-temperature intrinsic ferromagnetic semiconductors and quantum anomalous Hall states in XBr3 (X = Cu, Ag, Au) monolayers†
Abstract
Two-dimensional magnetic materials have recently attracted much attention owing to their potential applications in the design of spintronic devices. Based on density-functional theory calculations, we build three monolayer transition-metal tribromides (XBr3, X = Cu, Ag, Au), which are found to be a series of stable two-dimensional intrinsic ferromagnetic (FM) semiconductors. Their easy axes are all along out-of-plane directions with large magnetic anisotropy energies (1.478 meV, 1.598 meV, and 0.386 meV per transition-metal atom for CuBr3, AgBr3, and AuBr3, respectively). Very high Curie temperature (149 K) is predicted for CuBr3 based on a Heisenberg model, much larger than that of the monolayer CrI3. The FM states of XBr3 (X = Cu, Ag, Au), dominated by super-exchange coupling between the eg(dz2, dx2−y2) states of two neighbor X atoms (mediated by Br 4p states), are all robust against tensile strain with certain strengths. Interestingly, AgBr3 and AuBr3 are bipolar FM semiconductors. The band gaps for the three built monolayers exhibit different trends in variation as a function of the strain, which can be attributed to the competition of the magnetic exchange, band dispersion, and spin–orbit coupling (SOC). A topologically nontrivial quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) state is obtained in the carrier-doped monolayer CuBr3. Our results provide an excellent class of experimentally feasible materials for the intrinsic FM semiconductors, which can facilitate the development of spintronic and microelectronic devices.