Open Access
Open access
Nature Communications, volume 15, issue 1, publication number 1259

Observation of giant room-temperature anisotropic magnetoresistance in the topological insulator β-Ag2Te

Wei Ai 1
Fuyang Chen 2
Zhaochao Liu 1
Xixi Yuan 3
Lei Zhang 1
Yuyu He 1
Xinyue Dong 1
Huixia Fu 3
Feng Luo 1
Ming-Xun Deng 2
Ruiqiang Wang 2
Jinxiong Wu 1
Show full list: 12 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-02-10
scimago Q1
SJR4.887
CiteScore24.9
Impact factor14.7
ISSN20411723
General Chemistry
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Multidisciplinary
General Physics and Astronomy
Abstract

Achieving room-temperature high anisotropic magnetoresistance ratios is highly desirable for magnetic sensors with scaled supply voltages and high sensitivities. However, the ratios in heterojunction-free thin films are currently limited to only a few percent at room temperature. Here, we observe a high anisotropic magnetoresistance ratio of −39% and a giant planar Hall effect (520 μΩ⋅cm) at room temperature under 9 T in β-Ag2Te crystals grown by chemical vapor deposition. We propose a theoretical model of anisotropic scattering — induced by a Dirac cone tilt and modulated by intrinsic properties of effective mass and sound velocity — as a possible origin. Moreover, small-size angle sensors with a Wheatstone bridge configuration were fabricated using the synthesized β-Ag2Te crystals. The sensors exhibited high output response (240 mV/V), high angle sensitivity (4.2 mV/V/°) and small angle error (<1°). Our work translates the developments in topological insulators to a broader impact on practical applications such as high-field magnetic and angle sensors.

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