Novel 2D Altermagnetic Vanadium Oxide with a Buckled Lieb Structure
Abstract
Altermagnetism has recently emerged as a highly promising phase for spintronics, offering the combined advantages of both antiferromagnets and ferromagnets. Here, using a first-principles analysis based on density functional theory (DFT), we identify a monolayer V2O crystal in a buckled Lieb lattice as a promising two-dimensional altermagnetic material. The structural and thermal stability of V2O is verified through calculations of the crystal's formation energy, phonon structure, room-temperature ab initio molecular dynamics, and stiffness matrix. The system is found to exhibit auxetic behavior with a negative Poisson's ratio. Our calculations indicate an antiferromagnetic ground state with a local magnetic moment of 2.79\,μB per V atom and a magnetocrystalline anisotropy that favors an out-of-plane easy axis. The electronic structure exhibits a momentum-dependent spin splitting of 1.2 eV, which is a characteristic of altermagnets. Inclusion of spin-orbit coupling breaks the symmetry of the quadratic band crossing near the Fermi level, resulting in a large Berry curvature and significant intrinsic spin Hall conductivity around 40\,(/e)\,S\,cm-1. The results demonstrate that monolayer V2O serves as a robust room-temperature altermagnetic platform, exhibiting magnetic anisotropy and spin-dependent transport responses.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.