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Ultrafast manipulation of the NiO antiferromagnetic order via sub gap optical excitation

Authors :
Xiaocui Wang
Robin Y. Engel
Igor Vaskivskyi
Diego Turenne
Vishal Shokeen
Alexander Yaroslavtsev
Oscar Grånäs
Ronny Knut
Jan O. Schunck
Siarhei Dziarzhytski
Günter Brenner
Ru-Pan Wang
Marion Kuhlmann
Frederik Kuschewski
Wibke Bronsch
Christian Schüßler-Langeheine
Andriy Styervoyedov
Stuart S. P. Parkin
Fulvio Parmigiani
Olle Eriksson
Martin Beye
Hermann A. Dürr
Source :
Faraday Discussions, Faraday discussions 237, 300-316 (2022). doi:10.1039/d2fd00005a
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Faraday discussions 237, 300 - 316 (2022). doi:10.1039/d2fd00005a<br />Wide-band-gap insulators such as NiO offer the exciting prospect of coherently manipulating electronic correlations with strong optical fields. Contrary to metals where rapid dephasing of optical excitation via electronic processes occurs, the sub-gap excitation in charge-transfer insulators has been shown to couple to low-energy bosonic excitations. However, it is currently unknown if the bosonic dressing field is composed of phonons or magnons. Here we use the prototypical charge-transfer insulator NiO to demonstrate that 1.5 eV sub-gap optical excitation leads to a renormalised NiO band-gap in combination with a significant reduction of the antiferromagnetic order. We employ element-specific X-ray reflectivity at the FLASH free-electron laser to demonstrate the reduction of the upper band-edge at the O 1s–2p core–valence resonance (K-edge) whereas the antiferromagnetic order is probed via X-ray magnetic linear dichroism (XMLD) at the Ni 2p–3d resonance (L$_2$-edge). Comparing the transient XMLD spectral line shape to ground-state measurements allows us to extract a spin temperature rise of 65 ± 5 K for time delays longer than 400 fs while at earlier times a non-equilibrium spin state is formed. We identify transient mid-gap states being formed during the first 200 fs accompanied by a band-gap reduction lasting at least up to the maximum measured time delay of 2.4 ps. Electronic structure calculations indicate that magnon excitations significantly contribute to the reduction of the NiO band gap.<br />Published by Soc., Cambridge [u.a.]

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Faraday Discussions, Faraday discussions 237, 300-316 (2022). doi:10.1039/d2fd00005a
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd91710818ca9ccf146804ebbce90413
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d2fd00005a