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Antiferromagnetic metals attract tremendous interest for memory applications due to their expected fast response dynamics in the terahertz frequency regime. Reading from and writing information into these materials is not easily achievable using magnetic fields, due to weak high-order magneto-optical signals and robustness of the magnetic structure against external magnetic fields. Polarized electromagnetic radiation is a promising alternative for probing their response, however, when ideal antiferromagnetic symmetry is present, this response vanishes. Hence, in this work we combine first-principles simulations with measurements of the polar magneto-optical Kerr effect under external magnetic fields, to study magneto-optical response of antiferromagnetic M$_2$As (M=Cr, Mn, and Fe). We devise a computational scheme to compute the magnetic susceptibility from total-energy changes using constraints on magnetic-moment tilting. Our predictions of the spectral dependence of polar magneto-optical Kerr rotation and ellipticity allow us to attribute these effects to breaking of the magnetic symmetry. We show that tilting affects the exchange interaction, while the spin-orbit interaction remains unaffected as the tilting angle changes. Our work provides understanding of the polar magneto-optical Kerr effect on a band structure level and underscores the importance of the magnetic susceptibility when searching for materials with large magneto-optical response.
When a polarized light beam is incident upon the surface of a magnetic material, the reflected light undergoes a polarization rotation. This magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) has been intensively studied in a variety of ferro- and ferrimagnetic mate
Using density functional theory calculations, we have found an enhanced magneto-optical Kerr effect in Fe/insulator interfaces. The results of our study indicate that interfacial Fe atoms in the Fe films have a low-dimensional nature, which causes th
We report the engineering of the polar magnetooptical (MO) Kerr effect in perpendicularly magnetized L10-MnAl epitaxial films with remarkably tuned magnetization, strain, and structural disorder by varying substrate temperature (Ts) during molecular-
We present the results of neutron scattering experiments to study the crystal and magnetic structures of the Mott-insulating transition metal oxyselenides Pr2O2M2OSe2 (M = Mn, Fe). The structural role of the non-Kramers Pr3+ ion is investigated and a
Magneto-optical spectroscopy based on the transverse magneto-optical Kerr effect (TMOKE) is a sensitive method for investigation of magnetically-ordered media. However, in magnetic materials the optical transitions are usually characterized by spectr