Yuichi
Saito
and
Rostislav V.
Mikhaylovskiy
*
Department of Physics, Lancaster University, Bailrigg, Lancaster LA1 4YW, UK. E-mail: r.mikhaylovskiy@lancaster.ac.uk
First published on 6th April 2022
Excitation with an ultrashort light pulse is arguably the only way to control spins in antiferromagnetic materials at both the nanoscale in space and ultrafast time scale. While recent experiments highlighted tantalising opportunities for spin switching and magnonics in antiferromagnets, the theoretical description of antiferromagnetic spin dynamics driven by strongly localised and ultrashort excitation is in its infancy. Here we report a theoretical model describing the nonlocal and nonlinear spin response to the excitation by light. We show that strongly localised ultrafast excitation can drive spin switching, which propagates in space and acts as a source of spin waves. Our theoretical formalism is readily available to describe current and future ultrafast spectroscopy experiments in antiferromagnets.
In most cases optical excitation or THz fields trigger only a linear response of the magnetic order, e.g. the spin oscillations at the eigen frequencies of antiferromagnetic resonances.4,8,9 More interesting from both fundamental and applied points of view is the possibility to trigger spin reorientation,10 inertial switching11 and photoinduced phase transition from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic states.12,13 However, for the optical pulses this photoinduced spin-reorientation is thermal in origin and therefore inherently slow.14 Thermal effects can also be driven by intense THz pulses manifesting as a slight shift of resonance frequency in TmFeO3, thulium orthoferrite.15 At the same time intense THz pulses can bring spins into a switching regime non-thermally. For instance all coherent spin switching was driven by a THz pulse concentrated and enhanced with a metallic antenna at the transition temperature of spin-reorientation in TmFeO3.16
In contrast to this experimental success, the spatial inhomogeneity of the spin dynamics after excitation has been largely unexplored because only an integral magnetic moment along thickness is detected with magneto-optical effects typically used in ultrafast experiments. However, in the experiments with antennas to intensify THz amplitude15–17 the THz field was distributed non-homogeneously and the spin dynamics is expected to propagate into the sample. Indeed, a very recent experiment revealed that strongly localised optical excitation drives propagating spin waves in an antiferromagnetic DyFeO3,18 although in a linear regime. It is an open question, however, what kind of propagating spin dynamics one can excite in the nonlinear regime with a strongly localised excitation?
Thus, our research motivation is to reveal temporal and spatial characteristics of the spin dynamics in the nonlinear regime. To this end, we construct the model to solve a partial differential equation which describes spin propagation in antiferromagnets, such as rare-earth orthoferrites. Then, we numerically calculate the spin dynamics triggered by a realistic THz pulse and vary parameters to understand the effect on nonlinearity.
(1) |
Rare earth orthoferrites exhibit spin-reorientations, so the orientation of the antiferromagnetic vector flips or rotates across a specific temperature point or interval. For instance, part of orthoferrites, such as TmFeO3, ErFeO3 and SmFeO3, have transitions from Γ2 to Γ4 phases as temperature increases.8 The magnetization pointed along the a-axis in the Γ2 phase moves continuously by 90 degrees to the c-axis in the Γ4 phase. We focus on the intermediate Γ24 phase with the antiferromagnetic vector in the ac-plane, in which considerably large nonlinearity was reported.20 At that phase, four equilibrium states, given by local minima of the potential energy, are placed in the ac-plane in the case of the zero bias field (Fig. 1b). The function η(T) in eqn (1) defines the equilibrium orientations and reads
(2) |
We consider two processes of excitation via the electric field and magnetic field of the THz pulse separately. The first term of the right-hand side of eqn (1) represents the modulation of magnetocrystalline anisotropy by THz electric field. The high-intensity electric field ETHz distorts the anisotropy mediated by the orbital states of the rare-earth ions and causes the spin excitation indirectly. Other three terms describe Zeeman coupling, which is a direct interaction between the external magnetic field Hext and the net magnetization. Regarding the magnetic field, we assume two origins for Hext in this paper: the static bias field Hbias is independent of time, which alters the potential energy steadily. As a result, the symmetry in the ac-plane is broken; conversely, the dynamic magnetic field HTHz is caused by the pump terahertz pulse. Since the torques exerted by HTHz and ETHz are additive, we compare their effects by solving the equation while only one of these terms is present.
The shape of the terahertz pulse with amplitudes, Hamp and Eamp, was taken from our measured data for the THz fields generated by tilted-pulse-front excitation and detected by electro-optical sampling.6 The manual zero filling to the latter data was implemented to generate the longer time scale (normalised data s(t) shown in Fig. 2). Furthermore, we postulated that the electric field and the magnetic field had exponential distribution with homogeneous offset in the substrate to describe the distribution of the near field in the vicinity of the antenna. The antenna fabricated on the surface enhances the terahertz signal and localizes the intensity at the neighbourhood of the antenna.3 The distribution function is formulated as:
(3) |
(4) |
In our calculations, the temperature was fixed at the midpoint within the spin reorientation temperature interval, namely T = 85 K. One of the equilibrium angles ϕ0 in the case of the no bias field was accurately set to 45° and the others are located in the fourth-fold symmetric positions. However, the bias field slightly shifts the stationary point of the potential. This means that initial values ϕ(t = 0) close to ϕ = 45 deg should be compensated adequately to remove the excitation by the bias field. After recalculation of the potential to know the new local minima with bias magnetic field, we applied initial conditions, ϕ(t = 0) = ϕ0 and ∂ϕ/∂t(t = 0) = 0 and they are spatially uniform. For parameters for the field distribution, we used A = 8 and d = 4 μm, which were the values used to model the antenna response in the previous experiment.15
Next, increasing the intensity of THz field, we stepped into the nonlinear regime. The enhanced magnetic field, HTHz = 54 kOe, induced nonlinear dynamics, involving flipping of the antiferromagnetic vector into another equilibrium orientation (Fig. 3a, see also ESI Movie 1†). This creates a non-stationary domain wall separating the regions with metastable spin orientations. The external bias Hbias = 2 kOe along the x-axis eliminated the two local minima around ϕ = ±135° (Fig. 3b). In the first part of the process in about ten picoseconds, the spin around the antenna moves to the other equilibrium position. This phenomenon is caused by inertia motion following the main peak of the THz pulse (at t < 3 ps in Fig. 2a). On the other hand, the angle of spins at a distant position from the antenna return to the initial position as a result of damping. This localised reversal forms a domain wall between the different spin orientations around y = 0.3 μm, and the position of the wall after the THz pulse duration is fixed all the time. The position of the domain wall is determined by the parameter d in eqn (3), the penetration depth of the THz field for the chosen wave form and spatial distribution. This position corresponds to the threshold THz amplitude, required to bring the magnetic order parameter over the potential barrier separating two equilibrium orientations (see Fig. 3b). At the same time the sudden appearance of this discontinuity generates spin waves with finite wavenumbers propagating into both positive and negative directions from the domain wall. The spin wave emission mechanisms resemble the linear regime mentioned before (Fig. 2b). The domain wall plays the role of the pinned boundary.
The different orientation of the bias field along the z-axis provide completely different results, accompanied with movement of the domain wall (Fig. 4a, ESI Movie 2†). The comparably weak bias Hbias = 500 Oe along the z-axis reduced the barrier to facilitate the switching by the THz pulse with the amplitude, HTHz = 54 kOe. The long-distance propagation of the wall follows from the different potential landscape (Fig. 4b). The bias modulated the symmetric potential to non-symmetric one at about ϕ = 0 and pushed up the initial position ϕ0 to the metastable state. The spin on this local minimum state fell down to the lower global minimum around ϕ = −45°. This is the origin of the domain movement. Moreover, the larger amplitude of bias field, for example Hbias = 1 kOe, caused the other domain wall between ϕ = −45° and ϕ = −135°, which stayed at the same position (see ESI Movie 3†). The boundary was essentially the same as the result shown in Fig. 3a from the standpoint of the equal potential levels.
Fig. 4 (a) Snapshots of the spin deflection angle in the strongly nonlinear regime, when the bias magnetic field is applied along the z-axis and the spins are initially aligned in a metastable state. In contrast to the situation shown in Fig. 3, here the domain wall is moving away from the sample boundary. (b) The potential landscape with the bias oriented z-axis show that the main excitation occurred as a result of falling through the slope between −45° and 45°. |
To compare dynamics induced by the electric field to one by the magnetic field, we applied ETHz = 9 MV cm−1 to eqn (1) and neglected terms for the Zeeman effect. We calculated only one case with Hbias = 2 kOe along the x-axis. The obtained result was quite similar (ESI Movie 4†) to the one shown in Fig. 3a because the action of ETHz can be seen as an effective magnetic field pulse.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See https://doi.org/10.1039/d2fd00035k |
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