Abstract

We studied the effect of hydrostatic pressure on the magnetic properties of the highly anisotropic van der Waals ferromagnetic metal ${\mathrm{Fe}}_{3}\mathrm{Ge}{\mathrm{Te}}_{2}$ (FGT) with the field applied along the easy axis. The paramagnetic-to-ferromagnetic transition occurs at the Curie temperature ${T}_{c}=180\phantom{\rule{0.16em}{0ex}}\mathrm{K}$ at ambient pressure, and ${T}_{c}$ decreases monotonically by up to 15 K as the pressure increases up to 1.44 GPa, while the magnetization is suppressed by the pressure. By using high-pressure x-ray diffraction techniques, we found that the Fe-Fe bond lengths tend to decrease, and the Fe-Ge(Te)-Fe bond angles deviate away from ${90}^{\ensuremath{\circ}}$ under hydrostatic pressures, indicating the modification of the exchange interactions. First-principles calculations further confirm the pressure effects. These results suggest that the competition between direct-, super-, and double-exchange interactions plays a crucial role in the pronounced magnetic response under the hydrostatic pressure, i.e., the direct-exchange becomes stronger at a higher pressure and, hence, leading to increased antiferromagnetic components and thus deceased ${T}_{c}$. The highly tunable magnetic properties under hydrostatic pressure in this system provide robust routes for spin manipulation in low-dimensional material systems.

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