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Spontaneous Hall and Nernst effects in antiferromagnets

Invited

Abstract

The anomalous Hall effect and its thermoelectric counterpart, the anomalous Nernst effect, were for a long time believed to be exclusively present in ferromagnetic materials. The development in the past years, however, revealed that these effects can be finite also in certain non-collinear antiferromagnets owing to the non-trivial topology of their band structure. A typical representative of this class of antiferromagnets is Mn3Sn. In the first part of this talk, we therefore discuss magneto thermal transport measurements in Mn3Sn thin films. We demonstrate that the local magneto-thermal response can be employed for a spatially resolved visualization of the magnetic properties of the antiferromagnet [1]. In the second part of the talk, we then address mechanisms for spontaneous Hall effects (i.e. a Hall effect present in absence of magnetic fields), including the crystal Hall effectrecently proposed by theory [2] and corroborated by first experimental indications in RuO2 [3]. This so far overlooked mechanism enables a spontaneous Hall effect arising from the crystal and spin symmetry of a particular compound, which tremendously broadens the pool of materials in which spontaneous Hall and Nernst effects can be expected. We finally introduce one particular example of a collinear antiferromagnet Mn5Si3 in which a finite spontaneous Hall effect is enabled via yet another combination of spin-space symmetry, and address the various contributions to the Hall signal together with their microscopic origins [4].

[1] Reichlova et al., Nature Communications 10, 5459 (2019)
[2] Smejkal et al., Science Advances 6, eaaz8809 (2020)
[3] Feng et al., arXiv:2002.08712 (2020)
[4] Reichlova et al., arxiv.org/abs/2012.15651

Presenters

  • Helena Reichlova

    IFMP, TU Dresden

Authors

  • Helena Reichlova

    IFMP, TU Dresden

  • Tomas Janda

    Uni Regensburg

  • Anastasios Markou

    CPFS, MPI Dresden

  • Dominik Kriegner

    IFMP, TU Dresden

  • Richard Schlitz

    IFMP, TU Dresden

  • Rafael Lopez Seeger

    SPINTEC, France

  • Ismaila Kounta

    CINaM Marseiile

  • Jakub Zelezny

    Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

  • Petr Nemec

    Charles Uni, Prague

  • Eva Schmoranzerova

    Charles Uni, Prague

  • Antonin Badura

    Charles Uni, Prague

  • Andy Thomas

    IFMP, TU Dresden

  • Claudia Felser

    CPFS, MPI Dresden

  • Vincent Baltz

    SPINTEC, France

  • Lisa Michez

    CINaM Marseiile

  • Jairo Sinova

    Uni Mainz, Johannes Gutenberg Universität

  • Thomas Jungwirth

    Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

  • Libor Smejkal

    Institute of Physics, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz, Germany, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Uni Mainz

  • Joerg Wunderlich

    Uni Regensburg

  • Sebastian Goennenwein

    Uni Konstanz