Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Competing magnetic interactions in the antiferromagnetic topological insulator MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$

83   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Robert J. McQueeney
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The antiferromagnetic (AF) compound MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ is suggested to be the first realization of an antiferromagnetic (AF) topological insulator. Here we report on inelastic neutron scattering studies of the magnetic interactions in MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ that possess ferromagnetic (FM) triangular layers with AF interlayer coupling. The spin waves display a large spin gap and pairwise exchange interactions within the triangular layer are frustrated due to large next-nearest neighbor AF exchange. The degree of frustration suggests proximity to a variety of magnetic phases, potentially including skyrmion phases, that could be accessed in chemically tuned compounds or upon the application of symmetry-breaking fields.



rate research

Read More

Crystal growth of MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ has delivered the first experimental corroboration of the 3D antiferromagnetic topological insulator state. Our present results confirm that the synthesis of MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ can be scaled-up and strengthen it as a promising experimental platform for studies of a crossover between magnetic ordering and non-trivial topology. High-quality single crystals of MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ are grown by slow cooling within a narrow range between the melting points of Bi$_{2}$Te$_{3}$ (586 {deg}C) and MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ (600 {deg}C). Single crystal X-ray diffraction and electron microscopy reveal ubiquitous antisite defects in both cation sites and, possibly, Mn vacancies. Powders of MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ can be obtained at subsolidus temperatures, and a complementary thermochemical study establishes a limited high-temperature range of phase stability. Nevertheless, quenched powders are stable at room temperature and exhibit long-range antiferromagnetic ordering below 24 K. The expected Mn(II) out-of-plane magnetic state is confirmed by the magnetization, X-ray photoemission, X-ray absorption and linear dichroism data. MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$ exhibits a metallic type of resistivity in the range 4.5-300 K. The compound is an n-type conductor that reaches a thermoelectric figure of merit up to ZT = 0.17. Angle-resolved photoemission experiments provide evidence for a surface state forming a gapped Dirac cone.
We report a high frequency/high magnetic field electron spin resonance (HF-ESR) spectroscopy study in the sub-THz frequency domain of the two representatives of the family of magnetic topological insulators (MnBi$_{2}$Te$_{4}$)(Bi$_{2}$Te$_{3}$)$_{n}$ with $n = 0$ and 1. The HF-ESR measurements in the magnetically ordered state at a low temperature of $T = 4$ K combined with the calculations of the resonance modes showed that the spin dynamics in MnBi$_{text{4}}$Te$_{text{7}}$ is typical for an anisotropic easy-axis type ferromagnet (FM) whereas MnBi$_{text{2}}$Te$_{text{4}}$ demonstrates excitations of an anisotropic easy-axis type antiferromagnet (AFM). However, by applying the field stronger than a threshold value $sim 6$ T we observed in MnBi$_{text{2}}$Te$_{text{4}}$ a crossover from the AFM resonance modes to the FM modes which properties are very similar to the ferromagnetic response of MnBi$_{text{4}}$Te$_{text{7}}$. We attribute this remarkably unusual effect unexpected for a canonical easy-axis AFM, which, additionally, can be accurately reproduced by numerical calculations of the excitation modes, to the closeness of the strength of the AFM exchange and magnetic anisotropy energies which appears to be a very specific feature of this compound. Our experimental data evidences that the spin dynamics of the magnetic building blocks of these compounds, the Mn-based septuple layers (SLs), is inherently ferromagnetic featuring persisting short-range FM correlations far above the magnetic ordering temperature as soon as the SLs get decoupled either by introducing a nonmagnetic quintuple interlayer, as in MnBi$_{text{4}}$Te$_{text{7}}$, or by applying a moderate magnetic field, as in MnBi$_{text{2}}$Te$_{text{4}}$, which may have an effect on the surface topological band structure of these compounds.
The interplay between magnetism and non-trivial topology in magnetic topological insulators (MTI) is expected to give rise to a variety of exotic topological quantum phenomena, such as the quantum anomalous Hall (QAH) effect and the topological axion states. A key to assessing these novel properties is to tune the Fermi level in the exchange gap of the Dirac surface band. MnBi$_2$Te$_4$ possesses non-trivial band topology with intrinsic antiferromagnetic (AFM) state that can enable all of these quantum states, however, highly electron-doped nature of the MnBi$_2$Te$_4$ crystals obstructs the exhibition of the gapped topological surface states. Here, we tailor the material through Sb-substitution to reveal the gapped surface states in MnBi$_{2-x}$Sb$_{x}$Te$_{4}$ (MBST). By shifting the Fermi level into the bulk band gap of MBST, we access the surface states and show a band gap of 50 meV at the Dirac point from quasi-particle interference (QPI) measured by scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS). Surface-dominant conduction is confirmed below the Neel temperature through transport spectroscopy measured by multiprobe STM. The surface band gap is robust against out-of-plane magnetic field despite the promotion of field-induced ferromagnetism. The realization of bulk-insulating MTI with the large exchange gap offers a promising platform for exploring emergent topological phenomena.
Using scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy, we visualized the native defects in antiferromagnetic topological insulator $mathrm{MnBi_2Te_4}$. Two native defects $mathrm{Mn_{Bi}}$ and $mathrm{Bi_{Te}}$ antisites can be well resolved in the topographic images. $mathrm{Mn_{Bi}}$ tend to suppress the density of states at conduction band edge. Spectroscopy imaging reveals a localized peak-like local density of state at $sim80$~meV below the Fermi energy. A careful inspection of topographic and spectroscopic images, combined with density functional theory calculation, suggests this results from $mathrm{Bi_{Mn}}$ antisites at Mn sites. The random distribution of $mathrm{Mn_{Bi}}$ and $mathrm{Bi_{Mn}}$ antisites results in spatial fluctuation of local density of states near the Fermi level in $mathrm{MnBi_2Te_4}$.
Using angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES), we investigate the surface electronic structure of the magnetic van der Waals compounds MnBi$_4$Te$_7$ and MnBi$_6$Te$_{10}$, the $n=$~1 and 2 members of a modular (Bi$_2$Te$_3$)$_n$(MnBi$_2$Te$_4$) series, which have attracted recent interest as intrinsic magnetic topological insulators. Combining circular dichroic, spin-resolved and photon-energy-dependent ARPES measurements with calculations based on density functional theory, we unveil complex momentum-dependent orbital and spin textures in the surface electronic structure and disentangle topological from trivial surface bands. We find that the Dirac-cone dispersion of the topologial surface state is strongly perturbed by hybridization with valence-band states for Bi$_2$Te$_3$-terminated surfaces but remains preserved for MnBi$_2$Te$_4$-terminated surfaces. Our results firmly establish the topologically non-trivial nature of these magnetic van der Waals materials and indicate that the possibility of realizing a quantized anomalous Hall conductivity depends on surface termination.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا