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Creators/Authors contains: "Lasek, Kinga"

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  1. Insertion of metal layers between layered transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) enables the design of new pseudo-2D nanomaterials. The general premise is that various metal atoms may adopt energetically favorable intercalation sites between two TMD sheets. These covalently bound metals arrange in metastable configurations and thus enable the controlled synthesis of nanomaterials in a bottom-up approach. Here, this method is demonstrated by the insertion of Cr or Mn between VSe2 layers. Vacuum-deposited transition metals diffuse between VSe2 layers with increasing concentration, arranging in ordered phases. The Cr3+ or Mn2+ ions are in octahedral coordination and thus in a high-spin state. Measured and computed magnetic moments are high for dilute Cr atoms, but with increasing Cr concentration the average magnetic moment decreases, suggesting antiferromagnetic ordering between Cr ions. The many possible combinations of transition metals with TMDs form a library for exploring quantum phenomena in these nanomaterials. 
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  4. Abstract Post‐synthesis doping of 2D materials is demonstrated by incorporation of vapor‐deposited transition metals into a MoTe2lattice. Using this approach, vanadium doping of 2H‐MoTe2produces a 2D ferromagnetic semiconductor with a Curie temperature above room temperature (RT). Surprisingly, ferromagnetic properties can be induced with very low vanadium concentrations, down to ≈0.2%. The vanadium species introduced at RT are metastable, and annealing to above ≈500 K results in the formation of a thermodynamically favored impurity configuration that, however, exhibits reduced ferromagnetic properties. Doping with titanium, instead of vanadium, shows a similar incorporation behavior, but no ferromagnetism is induced in MoTe2. This indicates that the type of impurities in addition to their atomic configuration is responsible for the induced magnetism. The interpretation of the experimental results is consistent with ab initio calculations, which confirm that the proposed vanadium impurity configurations exhibit magnetic moments, in contrast to the same configurations with titanium impurities. This study illustrates the possibility to induce ferromagnetic properties in layered van der Waals semiconductors by controlled magnetic impurity doping and thus to add magnetic functionalities to 2D materials. 
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