Abstract

Couplings between different ferroics in two-dimensional (2D) materials, with atomic thickness and van der Waals surface, have been long sought but not yet realized. Here we show the first-principles evidence of unique triferroic couplings in recently synthesized ${\mathrm{CrI}}_{2}$ monolayer. Its ferroelasticity with a low switching barrier stems from the Jahn-Teller effect. When coupled with the interaction of a substrate, a type of interfacial ferroelectricity with direction determined by the ferroelastic states can emerge which can be switched following the same low-barrier pathway of ferroelastic switching. The direction of its striped antiferromagnetism is also governed by its ferroelastic states, leading to a coupling of ferroelasticity, ferroelectricity, and magnetism. Such mechanism of multiferroic couplings, denoted as interfacial Jahn-Teller triferroicity, can be applied to other 2D materials such as ${\mathrm{CuCl}}_{2}$ and their Janus monolayers, enabling electrical manipulation of spintronics for efficient nonvolatile random-access memories.

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