Abstract
We investigate the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, critical behavior, and magnetocaloric effect in ferromagnetic-layered Cr2Te3. We have studied the critical behavior around the Curie temperature (TC) using various techniques, including the modified Arrott plot (MAP), the Kouvel-Fisher method (KF), and critical isothermal analysis (CI). The derived critical exponents β = 0.353(4) and γ = 1.213(5) fall in between the three-dimensional (3D) Ising and 3D Heisenberg type models, suggesting complex magnetic interactions by not falling into any single universality class. On the other hand, the renormalization group theory, employing the experimentally obtained critical exponents, suggests 3D-Ising-type magnetic interactions decaying with distance as J(r) = r−4.89. We also observe an extremely large uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy (MAE) of Ku = 2065 kJ/m3, the highest ever found in any CrxTey based systems, originating from the noncollinear ferromagnetic ground state as predicted from the first-principles calculations. The self-consistent renormalization theory (SCR) suggests Cr2Te3 to be an out-of-plane itinerant ferromagnet. Further, a maximum entropy change of -ΔSMmax≈ 2.08 J/kg − K is estimated around TC for the fields applied parallel to the c-axis.
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