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Large Itinerant Electron Exchange Coupling in the Magnetic Topological Insulator MnBi2Te4

Authors :
Padmanabhan, Hari
Stoica, Vladimir A.
Kim, Peter
Poore, Maxwell
Yang, Tiannan
Shen, Xiaozhe
Reid, Alexander H.
Lin, Ming-Fu
Park, Suji
Yang, Jie
Wang, Huaiyu
Koocher, Nathan Z.
Puggioni, Danilo
Min, Lujin
Lee, Seng-Huat
Mao, Zhiqiang
Rondinelli, James M.
Lindenberg, Aaron M.
Chen, Long-Qing
Wang, Xijie
Averitt, Richard D.
Freeland, John W.
Gopalan, Venkatraman
Source :
Advanced Materials (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Magnetism in topological materials creates phases exhibiting quantized transport phenomena with applications in spintronics and quantum information. The emergence of such phases relies on strong interaction between localized spins and itinerant states comprising the topological bands, and the subsequent formation of an exchange gap. However, this interaction has never been measured in any intrinsic magnetic topological material. Using a multimodal approach, this exchange interaction is measured in MnBi2Te4, the first realized intrinsic magnetic topological insulator. Interrogating nonequilibrium spin dynamics, itinerant bands are found to exhibit a strong exchange coupling to localized Mn spins. Momentum-resolved ultrafast electron scattering and magneto-optic measurements reveal that itinerant spins disorder via electron-phonon scattering at picosecond timescales. Localized Mn spins, probed by resonant X-ray scattering, disorder concurrently with itinerant spins, despite being energetically decoupled from the initial excitation. Modeling the results using atomistic simulations, the exchange coupling between localized and itinerant spins is estimated to be >100 times larger than superexchange interactions. This implies an exchange gap of >25 meV should occur in the topological surface states. By directly quantifying local-itinerant exchange coupling, this work validates the materials-by-design strategy of utilizing localized magnetic order to create and manipulate magnetic topological phases, from static to ultrafast timescales.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Advanced Materials (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2204.04791
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202202841