Abstract

The ability to control the underlying lattice geometry of a system may enable transitions between emergent quantum ground states. We report in situ gate switching between honeycomb and triangular lattice geometries of an electron many-body Hamiltonian in rhombohedral (R)-stacked molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe2) moiré bilayers, resulting in switchable magnetic exchange interactions. At zero electric field, we observed a correlated ferromagnetic insulator near one hole per moiré unit cell with a widely tunable Curie temperature up to 14 K. Applying an electric field switched the system into a half-filled triangular lattice with antiferromagnetic interactions; further doping this layer-polarized superlattice tuned the antiferromagnetic exchange interaction back to ferromagnetic. Our work demonstrates R-stacked MoTe2 moirés to be a laboratory for engineering correlated states with nontrivial topology.

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