Characterization of room-temperature in-plane magnetization in thin flakes of CrTe2 with a single spin magnetometer
Abstract
We demonstrate room-temperature ferromagnetism with in-plane magnetic anisotropy in thin flakes of the CrTe2 van der Waals ferromagnet. Using quantitative magnetic imaging with a single spin magnetometer based on a nitrogen-vacancy defect in diamond, we infer a room-temperature in-plane magnetization in the range of M 27 kA/m for flakes with thicknesses down to 20 nm. In addition, our measurements indicate that the orientation of the magnetization is not determined solely by shape anisotropy in micron-sized CrTe2 flakes, which suggest the existence of a non-negligible magnetocrystalline anisotropy. These results make CrTe2 a unique system in the growing family of van der Waals ferromagnets, as it is the only material platform known to date which offers an intrinsic in-plane magnetization and a Curie temperature above 300 K in thin flakes.