Nature Materials, volume 22, issue 5, pages 583-590
Axion optical induction of antiferromagnetic order
Jian Xiang Qiu
1
,
Junyeong Ahn
2
,
Anyuan Gao
1
,
Houchen Li
1
,
Xin-Yue Zhang
3
,
Barun Ghosh
4
,
Chao-Wei Hu
5
,
Yu-Xuan Wang
3
,
Yu-Fei Liu
1, 2
,
Damien Bérubé
1
,
Thao Dinh
1, 2
,
Zhenhao Gong
6, 7, 8, 9
,
Shang-Wei Lien
10, 11, 12
,
Sheng Chin Ho
1
,
Bahadur Singh
13
,
Kenji Watanabe
14
,
Toshio TAMGUCHI
15
,
D. C. Bell
16, 17
,
HAI-ZHOU LU
6, 7, 8, 9
,
Arun Bansil
4
,
Hsin-Chung Lin
18
,
Tay-Rong Chang
10, 11, 12
,
Brian B. Zhou
3
,
Qiong Ma
3, 19
,
Ashvin Vishwanath
2
,
Ni Ni
5
,
Su Xu
1
7
Quantum Science Center of Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (Guangdong), Shenzhen, China
|
8
Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Quantum Science and Engineering, Shenzhen, China
|
9
International Quantum Academy, Shenzhen, China
|
11
Center for Quantum Frontiers of Research and Technology (QFort), Tainan, Taiwan
|
12
Physics Division, National Center for Theoretical Sciences, Taipei, Taiwan
|
14
18
Institute of Physics, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-03-09
Journal:
Nature Materials
scimago Q1
SJR: 14.231
CiteScore: 62.2
Impact factor: 37.2
ISSN: 14761122, 14764660
General Chemistry
Condensed Matter Physics
General Materials Science
Mechanical Engineering
Mechanics of Materials
Abstract
Using circularly polarized light to control quantum matter is a highly intriguing topic in physics, chemistry and biology. Previous studies have demonstrated helicity-dependent optical control of chirality and magnetization, with important implications in asymmetric synthesis in chemistry; homochirality in biomolecules; and ferromagnetic spintronics. We report the surprising observation of helicity-dependent optical control of fully compensated antiferromagnetic order in two-dimensional even-layered MnBi2Te4, a topological axion insulator with neither chirality nor magnetization. To understand this control, we study an antiferromagnetic circular dichroism, which appears only in reflection but is absent in transmission. We show that the optical control and circular dichroism both arise from the optical axion electrodynamics. Our axion induction provides the possibility to optically control a family of $${{{\mathcal{PT}}}}$$ -symmetric antiferromagnets ( $${{{\mathcal{P}}}}$$ , inversion; $${{{\mathcal{T}}}}$$ , time-reversal) such as Cr2O3, even-layered CrI3 and possibly the pseudo-gap state in cuprates. In MnBi2Te4, this further opens the door for optical writing of a dissipationless circuit formed by topological edge states. The authors demonstrate control of antiferromagnetic order using helical light.
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