Heat Transport between Antiferromagnetic Insulators and Normal Metals
ORAL
Abstract
Antiferromagnetic insulators can become active spintronics components by controlling and detecting their dynamics via spin currents in adjacent metals. This cross-talk occurs via spin-transfer and spin-pumping, phenomena that have been predicted to be as strong in antiferromagnets as in ferromagnets. In a recent article,\footnote{A. Brataas, H. Skarsv{\aa}g, E. G. Tveten and E. L. Fj{\ae}rbu, arXiv:1506.06705 (2015)} we demonstrate that a temperature gradient drives a significant heat flow from magnons in antiferromagnetic insulators to electrons in adjacent normal metals. The same coefficients as in the spin-transfer and spin-pumping processes also determine the thermal conductance. However, in contrast to ferromagnets, the heat is not transferred via a spin Seebeck effect which is absent in antiferromagnetic insulator-normal metal systems. Instead, the heat is proportional to a large staggered spin Seebeck effect.
–
Authors
-
Eirik Lohaugen Fjaerbu
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
-
Hans Skarsv{\AA}g
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
-
Erlend G. Tveten
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
-
Arne Brataas
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norwegian University