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Spontaneous emergence of phonon angular momentum through hybridization with magnons

ORAL

Abstract

Chirality, the breaking of improper rotational symmetry, is a fundamental concept spanning diverse scientific domains. In condensed matter physics, chiral phonons, originating from circular atomic motions that carry angular momentum, have sparked intense interest due to their coupling to magnetic degrees of freedom, enabling potential phonon-controlled spintronics. However, modes and their counter-rotating counterparts are typically degenerate at the Brillouin zone center. Selective excitation of a single-handed circularly polarized phonon requires external stimuli that break the degeneracy. Whether energetically nondegenerate pairs can appear spontaneously without structural or external symmetry breaking remains an open question. Here, we demonstrate that nondegenerate elliptically polarized phonon pairs can be induced by coupling to magnons with same helicity in the van der Waals antiferromagnet FePSe3. We confirm the presence of magnon-phonon hybrids, also known as magnon polarons, which exhibit inherent elliptical polarization with opposite helicities and distinct energies. This nondegeneracy enables their coherent excitation with linearly polarized terahertz pulses, which also endows these rotating modes with chirality. By tuning the polarization of the terahertz drive and measuring phase-resolved polarimetry of the resulting coherent oscillations, we determine the ellipticity and map the trajectory of these hybrid quasiparticles. Our findings establish a general approach to search for intrinsically nondegenerate phonons with angular momentum at the center of the Brillouin zone and introduce a new methodology for characterizing their ellipticity, outlining a roadmap towards chiral-phonon-controlled spintronic functionalities.

Publication: arXiv:2410.10693

Presenters

  • Honglie Ning

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT

Authors

  • Honglie Ning

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT

  • Tianchuang Luo

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Batyr Ilyas

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California Berkeley

  • Emil V Boström

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter

  • Jaena Park

    Seoul National University

  • Junghyun Kim

    Seoul National University

  • Je-Geun Park

    Seoul National University, Seoul Natl Univ

  • Dominik M Juraschek

    Eindhoven University of Technology

  • Angel Rubio

    Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Institute for the Structure & Dynamics of Matter; Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational Quantum Physics (CCQ) & Initiative for Computational Catalysis (ICC)

  • Nuh Gedik

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology