Terahertz light–driven coupling of antiferromagnetic spins to lattice
/ Authors
/ Abstract
Description Coupling up of spins and lattice The development of spintronics and magnetic data storage relies on understanding and controlling the dynamics of magnetic excitations within a material. Of crucial importance for practical applications is how fast the magnetization can be switched. Mashkovich et al. report the use of ultrafast terahertz radiation to create magnon excitations in the antiferromagnet cobalt difluoride that can then be coupled with phonon excitations (see the Perspective by Juraschek and Narang). Using light to control coupling between the spins and the lattice provides a route to manipulate magnetization in antiferromagnetic materials on ultrafast time scales. —ISO Terahertz light pulses were used to coherently couple antiferromagnetic spins to the lattice. Understanding spin-lattice coupling represents a key challenge in modern condensed matter physics, with crucial importance and implications for ultrafast and two-dimensional magnetism. The efficiency of angular momentum and energy transfer between spins and the lattice imposes fundamental speed limits on the ability to control spins in spintronics, magnonics, and magnetic data storage. We report on an efficient nonlinear mechanism of spin-lattice coupling driven by terahertz light pulses. A nearly single-cycle terahertz pulse resonantly interacts with a coherent magnonic state in the antiferromagnet cobalt difluoride (CoF2) and excites the Raman-active terahertz phonon. The results reveal the distinctive functionality of antiferromagnets that allows ultrafast spin-lattice coupling using light.
Journal: Science