Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session K23: Spin-Dependent Phenomena in Semiconductors: van der Waals Electrical Control
3:00 PM–5:48 PM,
Tuesday, March 5, 2024
Room: 101C
Sponsoring
Unit:
GMAG
Chair: Paulo Faria Junior, University of Regensburg; Steven Bennett, United States Naval Research Laboratory
Abstract: K23.00004 : Magnon transport in two-dimensional magnets
4:00 PM–4:12 PM
Presenter:
Caleb M Webb
(University of Arizona)
Authors:
Caleb M Webb
(University of Arizona)
Shufeng Zhang
(University of Arizona)
such as Yttrium Iron Garnet has been a recent topic of interest in the field of spintronics.
However, the typically low magnon density in these 3D films results in reduced magnon
conductance. In this work, we investigate the theoretical aspects of magnon conductance of
two-dimensional (2D) materials, where an enhanced magnon density offers promise. We
calculate the magnon scattering rate and conductivity, accounting for magnon-magnon
interactions in a pristine, two-dimensional ferromagnetic material with an easy-axis
anisotropy. Furthermore, we establish their correlation with parameters like external field
strength, field orientation, and temperature. Our findings indicate that conductivity faces
significant suppression for fields which are neither parallel nor perpendicular to the easy axis.
This is attributed to non-magnon conserving processes that emerge at lower orders in the
Holstein-Primakoff expansion. Drawing from our theoretical framework, when applied to an
experimental setup similar to that of Wei et al. [1], where two Pt bars rest atop a 2D magnet,
we predict the attenuation length of magnon current decay can be controlled by the
direction and the magnitude of the external magnetic field.
[1] X. Y. Wei, O. A. Santos, C. H. Sumba Lusero, G. E. W. Bauer, J. Ben Youssef, and B. J. Van Wees, Nat.
Mater. 21, 1352 (2022).
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