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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 18, 2025
  2. Abstract

    Magnetic van der Waals (vdW) materials are a promising platform for producing atomically thin spintronic and optoelectronic devices. The A‐type antiferromagnet CrSBr has emerged as a particularly exciting material due to its high magnetic ordering temperature, semiconducting electrical properties, and enhanced chemical stability compared to other vdW magnets. Exploring mechanisms to tune its magnetic properties will facilitate the development of nanoscale devices based on vdW materials with designer magnetic properties. Here it is investigated how the magnetic properties of CrSBr change under pressure and ligand substitution. Pressure compresses the unit cell, increasing the interlayer exchange energy while lowering the Néel temperature. Ligand substitution, realized synthetically through Cl alloying, anisotropically compresses the unit cell and suppresses the Cr‐halogen covalency, reducing the magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy and decreasing the Néel temperature. A detailed structural analysis combined with first‐principles calculations reveals that alterations in the magnetic properties are intricately related to changes in direct Cr–Cr exchange interactions and the Cr–anion superexchange pathways. Further, it is demonstrated that Cl alloying enables chemical tuning of the interlayer coupling from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic, which is unique among known two‐dimensional magnets.

     
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  3. Abstract

    CrSBr is an air‐stable two‐dimensional (2D) van der Waals semiconducting magnet with great technological promise, but its atomic‐scale magnetic interactions—crucial information for high‐frequency switching—are poorly understood. An experimental study is presented to determine the CrSBr magnetic exchange Hamiltonian and bulk magnon spectrum. TheA‐type antiferromagnetic order using single crystal neutron diffraction is confirmed here. The magnon dispersions are also measured using inelastic neutron scattering and rigorously fit the excitation modes to a spin wave model. The magnon spectrum is well described by an intra‐plane ferromagnetic Heisenberg exchange model with seven nearest in‐plane exchanges. This fitted exchange Hamiltonian enables theoretical predictions of CrSBr behavior: as one example, the fitted Hamiltonian is used to predict the presence of chiral magnon edge modes with a spin‐orbit enhanced CrSBr heterostructure.

     
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  4. Abstract

    Lithium‐ion batteries have remained a state‐of‐the‐art electrochemical energy storage technology for decades now, but their energy densities are limited by electrode materials and conventional liquid electrolytes can pose significant safety concerns. Lithium metal batteries featuring Li metal anodes, solid polymer electrolytes, and high‐voltage cathodes represent promising candidates for next‐generation devices exhibiting improved power and safety, but such solid polymer electrolytes generally do not exhibit the required excellent electrochemical properties and thermal stability in tandem. Here, an interpenetrating network polymer with weakly coordinating anion nodes that functions as a high‐performing single‐ion conducting electrolyte in the presence of minimal plasticizer, with a wide electrochemical stability window, a high room‐temperature conductivity of 1.5 × 10−4S cm−1, and exceptional selectivity for Li‐ion conduction (tLi+= 0.95) is reported. Importantly, this material is also flame retardant and highly stable in contact with lithium metal. Significantly, a lithium metal battery prototype containing this quasi‐solid electrolyte is shown to outperform a conventional battery featuring a polymer electrolyte.

     
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