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CMP
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Dr Jieyi Liu

Long Term Visitor

Research theme

  • Quantum materials

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Research groups

  • Electronic structures and photoemission spectroscopy
  • Oxide electronics
  • Thin film quantum materials
jieyi.liu@physics.ox.ac.uk
Clarendon Laboratory, room 118,261
  • About
  • Publications

Controllable magnetism and an anomalous Hall effect in (Bi1−xSbx)2Te3-intercalated MnBi2Te4 multilayers

Nanoscale Royal Society of Chemistry (2025)

Authors:

Peng Chen, Jieyi Liu, Yifan Zhang, Puyang Huang, Jack Bollard, Yiheng Yang, Ethan L Arnold, Xinqi Liu, Qi Yao, Fadi Choueikani, Gerrit van der Laan, Thorsten Hesjedal, Xufeng Kou

Abstract:

MnBi2Te4-based superlattices not only enrich the materials family of magnetic topological insulators, but also offer a platform for tailoring magnetic properties and interlayer magnetic coupling through the strategic insertion layer design. Here, we present the electrical and magnetic characterization of (Bi1-xSbx)2Te3-intercalated MnBi2Te4 multilayers grown by molecular beam epitaxy. By precisely adjusting the Sb-to-Bi ratio in the spacer layer, the magneto-transport response is modulated, unveiling the critical role of Fermi level tuning in optimizing the anomalous Hall signal and reconfiguring the magnetic ground state. Moreover, by varying the interlayer thickness, tunable magnetic coupling is achieved, enabling precise control over ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic components. These findings pave the way for the exploration of versatile magnetic topological phases in quantum materials systems.
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Quantum-confined tunable ferromagnetism on the surface of a Van der Waals antiferromagnet NaCrTe2

Nano Letters American Chemical Society 24:32 (2024) 9832-9838

Authors:

Yidian Li, Xian Du, Junjie Wang, Runzhe Xu, Wenxuan Zhao, Kaiyi Zhai, Jieyi Liu, Houke Chen, Nicholas C Plumb, Sailong Ju, Ming Shi, Zhongkai Liu, Jian-Gang Guo, Xiaolong Chen, Yulin Chen, Yiheng Yang, Lexian Yang

Abstract:

The surface of three-dimensional materials provides an ideal and versatile platform to explore quantum-confined physics. Here, we systematically investigate the electronic structure of Na-intercalated CrTe2, a van der Waals antiferromagnet, using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and ab initio calculations. The measured band structure deviates from the calculation of bulk NaCrTe2 but agrees with that of ferromagnetic monolayer CrTe2. Consistently, we observe unexpected exchange splitting of the band dispersions, persisting well above the Néel temperature of bulk NaCrTe2. We argue that NaCrTe2 features a quantum-confined 2D ferromagnetic state in the topmost surface layer due to strong ferromagnetic correlation in the CrTe2 layer. Moreover, the exchange splitting and the critical temperature can be controlled by surface doping of alkali-metal atoms, suggesting the feasibility of tuning the surface ferromagnetism. Our work not only presents a simple platform for exploring tunable 2D ferromagnetism but also provides important insights into the quantum-confined low-dimensional magnetic states.
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ARPES investigation of the electronic structure and its evolution in magnetic topological insulator MnBi2+2nTe4+3n family

Nature Physics Springer Nature 20:4 (2024) 571-578

Authors:

Dingsong Wu, Jiangang Yang, Jieyi Liu, Houke Chen, Yiheng Yang, Cheng Peng, Yulin Chen, Junjie Jia

Abstract:

The origin of high-temperature superconductivity in iron-based superconductors is still not understood; determination of the pairing symmetry is essential for understanding the superconductivity mechanism. In the iron-based superconductors that have hole pockets around the Brillouin zone centre and electron pockets around the zone corners, the pairing symmetry is generally considered to be s±, which indicates a sign change in the superconducting gap between the hole and electron pockets. For the iron-based superconductors with only hole pockets, however, a couple of pairing scenarios have been proposed, but the exact symmetry is still controversial. Here we determine that the pairing symmetry in KFe2As2—which is a prototypical iron-based superconductor with hole pockets both around the zone centre and around the zone corners—is also of the s± type. Our laser-based angle-resolved photoemission measurements have determined the superconducting gap distribution and identified the locations of the gap nodes on all the Fermi surfaces around the zone centres and the zone corners. These results unify the pairing symmetry in hole-doped iron-based superconductors and point to spin fluctuation as the pairing glue in generating superconductivity.
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Magnetic topological insulator heterostructures: a review

Advanced Materials Wiley 35 (2021) 2102427

Authors:

Jieyi Liu, Thorsten Hesjedal

Abstract:

Topological insulators (TIs) provide intriguing prospects for the future of spintronics due to their large spin–orbit coupling and dissipationless, counter-propagating conduction channels in the surface state. The combination of topological properties and magnetic order can lead to new quantum states including the quantum anomalous Hall effect that was first experimentally realized in Cr-doped (Bi,Sb)2Te3 films. Since magnetic doping can introduce detrimental effects, requiring very low operational temperatures, alternative approaches are explored. Proximity coupling to magnetically ordered systems is an obvious option, with the prospect to raise the temperature for observing the various quantum effects. Here, an overview of proximity coupling and interfacial effects in TI heterostructures is presented, which provides a versatile materials platform for tuning the magnetic and topological properties of these exciting materials. An introduction is first given to the heterostructure growth by molecular beam epitaxy and suitable structural, electronic, and magnetic characterization techniques. Going beyond transition-metal-doped and undoped TI heterostructures, examples of heterostructures are discussed, including rare-earth-doped TIs, magnetic insulators, and antiferromagnets, which lead to exotic phenomena such as skyrmions and exchange bias. Finally, an outlook on novel heterostructures such as intrinsic magnetic TIs and systems including 2D materials is given.
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Kerr effect anomaly in magnetic topological insulator superlattices

Nanotechnology IOP Publishing 31:43 (2020) 434001

Authors:

Jieyi Liu, Angadjit Singh, Balati Kuerbanjiang, Chw Barnes, Thorsten Hesjedal

Abstract:

We report the magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) study of magnetic topological insulator superlattice films with alternating transition-metal and rare-earth doping. We observe an unexpected hump in the MOKE hysteresis loops upon magnetization reversal at low temperatures, reminiscent of the topological Hall effect(THE) reported in transport measurements. The THE is commonly associated with the existence of magnetic skyrmions, i.e., chiral spin textures originating from topological defects in real space. Here, the observation of the effect is tied to ferromagnetic ordering in the rare-earth-doped layers of the superlattice. Our study may provide a new approach for the non-invasive optical investigation of skyrmions in magnetic films, complementary to electrical transport measurements, where the topological Hall signal is often the only hint of non-trivial magnetization patterns.
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