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Spin-mediated shear oscillators in a van der Waals antiferromagnet

Authors :
Zong, Alfred
Zhang, Qi
Zhou, Faran
Su, Yifan
Hwangbo, Kyle
Shen, Xiaozhe
Jiang, Qianni
Liu, Haihua
Gage, Thomas E.
Walko, Donald A.
Kozina, Michael E.
Luo, Duan
Reid, Alexander H.
Yang, Jie
Park, Suji
Lapidus, Saul H.
Chu, Jiun-Haw
Arslan, Ilke
Wang, Xijie
Xiao, Di
Xu, Xiaodong
Gedik, Nuh
Wen, Haidan
Source :
Nature; August 2023, Vol. 620 Issue: 7976 p988-993, 6p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Understanding how microscopic spin configuration gives rise to exotic properties at the macroscopic length scale has long been pursued in magnetic materials1–5. One seminal example is the Einstein–de Haas effect in ferromagnets1,6,7, in which angular momentum of spins can be converted into mechanical rotation of an entire object. However, for antiferromagnets without net magnetic moment, how spin ordering couples to macroscopic movement remains elusive. Here we observed a seesaw-like rotation of reciprocal lattice peaks of an antiferromagnetic nanolayer film, whose gigahertz structural resonance exhibits more than an order-of-magnitude amplification after cooling below the Néel temperature. Using a suite of ultrafast diffraction and microscopy techniques, we directly visualize this spin-driven rotation in reciprocal space at the nanoscale. This motion corresponds to interlayer shear in real space, in which individual micro-patches of the film behave as coherent oscillators that are phase-locked and shear along the same in-plane axis. Using time-resolved optical polarimetry, we further show that the enhanced mechanical response strongly correlates with ultrafast demagnetization, which releases elastic energy stored in local strain gradients to drive the oscillators. Our work not only offers the first microscopic view of spin-mediated mechanical motion of an antiferromagnet but it also identifies a new route towards realizing high-frequency resonators8,9up to the millimetre band, so the capability of controlling magnetic states on the ultrafast timescale10–13can be readily transferred to engineering the mechanical properties of nanodevices.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
620
Issue :
7976
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs63687061
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06279-y