With the help of a "playground" they created for observing exotic physics,
MIT scientists and colleagues have not only found a new way to manipulate
magnetism in a material with light but have also realized a rare form of
matter. The former could lead to applications including computer memory
storage devices that can read or write information in a much faster way,
while the latter introduces new physics.
A solid material is composed of different types of elementary particles,
such as protons and neutrons. Also ubiquitous in such materials are
"quasiparticles" that the public is less familiar with. These include
excitons, which are composed of an electron and a "hole," or the space left
behind when light is shone on a material and energy from a photon causes an
electron to jump out of its usual position. Through the mysteries of quantum
mechanics, however, the electron and hole are still connected and can
"communicate" with each other through electrostatic interactions.
"Excitons can be thought of as packets of energy that propagate through a
system," says Edoardo Baldini, one of two lead authors of a paper on the
work in Nature Communications. Baldini, now a professor at the University of
Texas at Austin, was an MIT postdoctoral associate when the work was
conducted in the laboratory of Nuh Gedik, an MIT professor of physics. The
other lead author is Carina Belvin, a doctoral student in the Gedik group.
"The excitons in this material are rather unique in that they are coupled to
magnetism in the system. It was quite impressive to be able to "kick" the
excitons with light and observe the associated changes in the magnetism,"
says Gedik, who is also associated with MIT's Materials Research Laboratory.
Manipulating Magnetism
The current work involves the creation of unusual excitons in the material
nickel phosphorus trisulfide (NiPS3). These excitons are "dressed" or
affected by the environment that surrounds them. In this case that
environment is the magnetism. "So what we found is that by exciting these
excitons we can actually manipulate magnetism in the material," Belvin says.
A magnet works because of a property of electrons called spin (another, more
familiar property of electrons is their charge). The spin can be thought of
as an elementary magnet, in which the electrons in an atom are like little
needles orienting in a certain way. In the magnets on your refrigerator, the
spins all point in the same direction, and the material is known as a
ferromagnet. In the material used by the MIT team, alternating spins point
in opposite directions, forming an antiferromagnet.
The physicists found that a pulse of light causes each of the little
electron "needles" in NiPS3 to start rotating around in a circle. The
rotating spins are synchronized and form a wave throughout the material,
known as a spin wave. Spin waves can be used in spin electronics, or
spintronics, a field that was introduced in the 1960s.
Spintronics essentially uses electrons' spin to go beyond electronics, which
is based on their charge. The ability to create spin waves in an
antiferroelectric material could lead to future computer memory devices that
can read or write information in a much faster way than those based on
electronics alone. "We are not there yet. In this paper we've demonstrated a
process that underlies coherent domain switching: the next step is to
actually switch domains," Baldini says.
Rare Form of Matter
Through their work, the team also demonstrated a rare form of matter. When
the physicists exposed NiPS3 to intense pulses of light, they found that it
turned into a metallic state that conducts electrons while maintaining its
magnetism. NiPS3 is ordinarily an insulator (a material that does not
conduct electrons). "It is very rare to have an antiferromagnet and a
metallic state in the same material," Belvin says.
The physicists believe this happens because the intense light causes the
excitons to collide with each other and break apart into their constituents:
electrons and holes. "We are basically destroying the excitons, so that the
electrons and holes can move around like those in a metal," Baldini says.
But these mobile particles do not interact with the localized electron spins
participating in the spin wave, so the magnetism is retained.
Baldini describes the experimental setup as a "playground for observing
many-body physics," which he defines as "the elegant interplay between
different bodies like excitons and spin waves." He concludes, "what I really
liked about this work was that it shows the complexity of the world around
us."
Other authors of the paper from MIT are Professor of Physics Senthil
Todadri, Ilkem Ozge Ozel (Ph.D. '18), Dan Mao (Ph.D. '21, now at Cornell
University), Hoi Chun Po (postdoctoral fellow '18-'21, now at Hong Kong
University of Science and Technology), and Clifford Allington (a graduate
student in chemistry). Additional authors are Suhan Son, Inho Hwang, and
Je-Geun Park of the Institute for Basic Science (Korea) and Seoul National
University; Beom Hyun Kim of the Korea Institute for Advanced Study; and Jae
Hoon Kim and Jonghyeon Kim of Yonsei University.
Reference:
Carina A. Belvin et al, Exciton-driven antiferromagnetic metal in a
correlated van der Waals insulator, Nature Communications (2021).
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25164-8
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Physics