Thermodynamic spin magnetization of strongly correlated two-dimensional electrons in a silicon inversion layer

A method invented to measure the minute thermodynamic magnetization of dilute two-dimensional fermions is applied to electrons in a silicon inversion layer. The interplay between the ferromagnetic interaction and disorderenhances the low temperature susceptibility up to 7.5 folds compared with the Pauli susceptibility of noninteracting electrons. The magnetization peaks in the vicinity of the density, where transition to strong localization takes place. At the same density, the susceptibility approaches the free spins value (Curie susceptibility), indicating an almost perfect compensation of the kinetic energy toll associated with spin polarization by the energy gained from the Coulomb correlation. Yet, the balance favors a paramagnetic phase over spontaneous magnetization in the whole density range.