ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Far from being limited to a trivial generalization of their Hermitian counterparts, non-Hermitian topological phases have gained widespread interest due to their unique properties. One of the most striking non-Hermitian phenomena is the skin effect, i.e., the localization of a macroscopic fraction of bulk eigenstates at a boundary, which underlies the breakdown of the bulk-edge correspondence. Here we investigate the emergence of the skin effect in magnetic insulating systems by developing a phenomenological approach to describing magnetic dissipation within a lattice model. Focusing on a spin-orbit-coupled van der Waals (vdW) ferromagnet with spin-nonconserving magnon-phonon interactions, we find that the magnetic skin effect emerges in an appropriate temperature regime. Our results suggest that the interference between Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) and nonlocal magnetic dissipation plays a key role in the accumulation of bulk states at the boundaries.
The discovery of spontaneous magnetism in van der Waal (vdW) magnetic monolayers has opened up an unprecedented platform for investigating magnetism in purely two-dimensional systems. Recently, it has been shown that the magnetic properties of vdW ma gnets can be easily tuned by adjusting the relative composition of halides. Motivated by these experimental advances, here we derive a model for a trihalide CrClBrI monolayer from symmetry principles and we find that, in contrast to its single-halide counterparts, it can display highly anisotropic nearest- and next-to-nearest neighbor Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya and Heisenberg interactions. Depending on the parameters, the DM interactions are responsible for the formation of exotic chiral spin states, such as skyrmions and spin cycloids, as shown by our Monte Carlo simulations. Focusing on a ground state with a two-sublattice unit cell, we find spin-wave bands with nonvanishing Chern numbers. The resulting magnon edge states yield a magnon thermal Hall conductivity that changes sign as function of temperature and magnetic field, suggesting chromium trihalides as a candidate for testing topological magnon transport in two-dimensional noncollinear spin systems.
275 - Benedetta Flebus 2021
In the last decades, collinear magnetic insulating systems have emerged as promising energy-saving information carriers. Their elementary collective spin excitations, i.e., magnons, can propagate for long distances bypassing the Joule heating effects that arise from electron scattering in metal-based devices. This tutorial article provides an introduction to theoretical and experimental advances in the study of magnonics in collinear magnetic insulating systems. We start by outlining the quantum theory of spin waves in ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic systems and we discuss their quantum statistics. We review the phenomenology of spin and heat transport of the coupled coherent and incoherent spin dynamics and the interplay between magnetic excitations and lattice degrees of freedom. Finally, we introduce the reader to the key ingredients of two experimental probes of magnetization dynamics, spin transport and NV-center relaxometry setups, and discuss experimental findings relevant to the outlined theory.
Motivated by the recent experimental realization of twisted transition metal dichalcogenide bilayers, we study a simplified model driven by different forms of monochromatic light. As a concrete and representative example we use parameters that corres pond to a twisted MoTe$_2$ homobilayer. First, we consider irradiation with circularly polarized light in free space and demonstrate that the corresponding Floquet Hamiltonian takes the same form as the static Hamiltonian, only with a constant overall shift in quasi-energy. This is in stark contrast to twisted bilayer graphene, where new terms are typically generated under an analagous drive. Longitudinal light, on the other hand, which can be generated from the transverse magnetic mode in a waveguide, has a much more dramatic effect--it renormalizes the tunneling strength between the layers, which effectively permits the tuning of the twist angle {em in-situ}. We find that, by varying the frequency and amplitude of the drive, one can induce a topological transition that cannot be obtained with the traditional form of the Floquet drive in free space. Furthermore, we find that strong drives can have a profound effect on the layer pseudospin texture of the twisted system, which coincides with multiple simultaneous band gap closings in the infinite-frequency limit. Surprisingly, these bandgap closings are not associated with topological transitions. For high but finite drive frequencies near $0.7$eV, the infinite-frequency band crossings become band gap minima of the order of $10^{-6}$ eV or smaller.
Magnetic systems have been extensively studied both from a fundamental physics perspective and as building blocks for a variety of applications. Their topological properties, in particular those of excitations, remain relatively unexplored due to the ir inherently dissipative nature. The recent introduction of non-Hermitian topological classifications opens up new opportunities for engineering topological phases in dissipative systems. Here, we propose a magnonic realization of a non-Hermitian topological system. A crucial ingredient of our proposal is the injection of spin current into the magnetic system, which alters and can even change the sign of terms describing dissipation. We show that the magnetic dynamics of an array of spin-torque oscillators can be mapped onto a non-Hermitian Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model exhibiting topologically protected edge states. Using exact diagonalization of the linearized dynamics and numerical solutions of the non-linear equations of motion, we find that a topological magnonic phase can be accessed by tuning the spin current injected into the array. In the topologically nontrivial regime, a single spin-torque oscillator on the edge of the array is driven into auto-oscillation and emits a microwave signal, while the bulk oscillators remain inactive. Our findings have practical utility for memory devices and spintronics neural networks relying on spin-torque oscillators as constituent units.
The longitudinal spin-Seebeck effect (SSE) in magnetic insulator$|$non-magnetic metal heterostructures has been theoretically studied primarily with the assumption of an isotropic interfacial exchange coupling. Here, we present a general theory of th e SSE in the case of an antisymmetric Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) at the interface, in addition to the usual Heisenberg form. We numerically evaluate the dependence of the spin current on the temperature and bulk DMI using a pyrochlore iridate as a model insulator with all-in all-out (AIAO) ground state configuration. We also compare the results of different crystalline surfaces arising from different crystalline orientations and conclude that the relative angles between the interfacial moments and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya vectors play a significant role in the spin transfer. Our work extends the theory of the SSE by including the anisotropic nature of the interfacial Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya exchange interaction in magnetic insulator$|$non-magnetic metal heterostructures and can suggest possible materials to optimize the interfacial spin transfer in spintronic devices.
Allotropes of carbon, including one-dimensional carbon nanotubes and two-dimensional graphene sheets, continue to draw attention as promising platforms for probing the physics of electrons in lower dimensions. Recent research has shown that the elect ronic properties of graphene multilayers are exquisitely sensitive to the relative orientation between sheets, and in the bilayer case exhibit strong electronic correlations when close to a magic twist angle. Here, we investigate the electronic properties of a carbon nanotube deposited on a graphene sheet by deriving a low-energy theory that accounts both for rotations and rigid displacements of the nanotube with respect to the underlying graphene layer. We show that this heterostructure is described by a translationally invariant, a periodic or a quasi-periodic Hamiltonian, depending on the orientation and the chirality of the nanotube. Furthermore, we find that, even for a vanishing twist angle, rigid displacements of a nanotube with respect to a graphene substrate can alter its electronic structure qualitatively. Our results identify a promising new direction for strong correlation physics in low dimensions.
204 - Benedetta Flebus 2019
Understanding the statistics of quasi-particle excitations in magnetic systems is essential for exploring new magnetic phases and collective quantum phenomena. While the chemical potential of a ferromagnetic gas has been extensively investigated both theoretically and experimentally, its antiferromagnetic counterpart remains uncharted. Here, we derive the statistics of a two-component U(1)-symmetric Bose gas and apply our results to an axially-symmetric antiferromagnetic insulator. We find that the two magnon eigenmodes of the system are described by an equal and opposite chemical potential, in analogy with a particle-antiparticle pair. Furthermore, we derive the thermomagnonic torques describing the interaction between the coherent and incoherent antiferromagnetic spin dynamics. Our results show that the magnitude and sign of the chemical potential can be tuned via an AC magnetic field driving resonantly one of the magnon modes. Finally, we propose NV-center relaxometry as a method to experimentally test our predictions.
The interplay between spin and heat currents at magnetic insulator|nonmagnetic metal interfaces has been a subject of much scrutiny because of both fundamental physics and the promise for technological applications. While ferrimagnetic and, more rece ntly, antiferromagnetic systems have been extensively investigated, a theory generalizing the heat-to-spin interconversion in noncollinear magnets is still lacking. Here, we establish a general framework for thermally-driven spin transport at the interface between a noncollinear magnet and a normal metal. Modeling the interfacial coupling between localized and itinerant magnetic moments via an exchange Hamiltonian, we derive an expression for the spin current, driven by a temperature difference, for an arbitrary noncollinear magnetic order. Our theory reproduces previously obtained results for ferromagnetic and antiferromagnet systems.
Temperature-dependent spin-Seebeck effect data on Pt|YIG (Y$_3$Fe$_5$O$_{12}$)|GGG (Gd$_3$Ga$_5$O$_{12}$) are reported for YIG films of various thicknesses. The effect is reported as a spin-Seebeck resistivity (SSR), the inverse spin-Hall field divid ed by the heat flux, to circumvent uncertainties about temperature gradients inside the films. The SSR is a non-monotonic function of YIG thickness. A diffusive model for magnon transport demonstrates how these data give evidence for the existence of two distinct length scales in thermal spin transport, a spin diffusion length and a magnon energy relaxation length.
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا