Electrically Switchable van der Waals Magnon Valves

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

Van der Waals magnets have emerged as a fertile ground for the exploration of highly tunable spin physics and spin-related technology. Two-dimensional (2D) magnons in van der Waals magnets are collective excitation of spins under strong confinement. Although considerable progress has been made in understanding 2D magnons, a crucial magnon device called the van der Waals magnon valve, in which the magnon signal can be completely and repeatedly turned on and off electrically, has yet to be realized. Here we demonstrate such magnon valves based on van der Waals antiferromagnetic insulator MnPS3. By applying DC electric current through the gate electrode, we show that the second harmonic thermal magnon (SHM) signal can be tuned from positive to negative. The guaranteed zero crossing during this tuning demonstrates a complete blocking of SHM transmission, arising from the nonlinear gate dependence of the non-equilibrium magnon density in the 2D spin channel. Using the switchable magnon valves we demonstrate a magnon-based inverter. These results illustrate the potential of van der Waals anti-ferromagnets for studying highly tunable spin-wave physics and for application in magnon-base circuitry in future information technology.

Reference: G. Chen et al., Nature Communications 12:6279 (2021)

*This project has been supported by the National Basic Research Program of China 2019YFA0308402, 2019YFA0308401, 2018YFA0305604, 2015CB921102, the National Natural Science Foundation of China 11934001, 11774010, 11921005, Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation JQ20002, the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences XDB28000000, the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province (No. 2019A1515010428 and No. 2020A1515110821), National Research Foundation Singapore programme NRF-CRP21-2018-0007, NRF-CRP22-2019-0007 and Singapore Ministry of Education via AcRF Tier 3 Programme 'Geometrical Quantum Materials' MOE2018-T3-1-002.

Publication: Nature Communications 12:6279 (2021)

Presenters

  • Jianhao Chen

    • Peking University

Authors

  • Jianhao Chen

    • Peking University