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Coexisting magnetic domains with distinct field-induced symmetries in the topological magnet EuIn<sub>2</sub>As<sub>2</sub>.

ORAL

Abstract

Hexagonal EuIn2As2 exhibits low-symmetry helical antiferromagnetic order that makes the compound a candidate stoichiometric magnetic topological-crystalline axion insulator with exotic surface states [1]. It is predicted that the surface states can be tuned by the direction and strength of an applied magnetic field [1]. We here report results from in-field single-crystal neutron diffraction experiments on EuIn2As2 with H||b, revealing successive field-induced changes to the magnetic order and discuss the implications to the system’s topology. With increasing field, magnetic domains displaying different symmetries are stabilized. Out of the three zero-field orthorhombic magnetic domains, one transitions to a canted A-type structure, while the other two both stabilize a fan-type structure. We find these domain related orders to coexist in our single crystal sample until full magnetic saturation is achieved at approximately 1 T. We predict that the presence of domains with differing magnetic symmetries has the potential to induce bulk topological edge modes at the magnetic domain boundaries.

[1] S. X. M. Riberolles et al., Nat Commun, 12, 999 (2021)

Presenters

  • Simon X Riberolles

    Ames Lab

Authors

  • Simon X Riberolles

    Ames Lab

  • Ana-Marija Nedic

    Iowa State University

  • Thais Victa Trevisan

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Ames Laboratory, Ames Lab

  • Brinda Kuthanazhi

    Iowa State University

  • Feng Ye

    Oak Ridge National Lab, SNS, ORNL

  • Paul C Canfield

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory, Ames National Laboratory/Iowa State University

  • Robert J McQueeney

    Iowa State University

  • Peter P Orth

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory

  • Benjamin G Ueland

    Ames National Laboratory

  • Sergey L Bud'ko

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory, Ames Laboratory, U.S. DOE and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames Laboratory