“Extraordinary” Phase Transition Revealed in a van der Waals Antiferromagnet

ORAL

Abstract

An uncommon and even counterintuitive situation in surface phase transitions is that the surface order emerges at a higher temperature than the bulk one, despite the two-dimensional (2D) Mermin-Wagner fluctuations. Such a phase transition, where the bulk order sets in after the surface order, has already been theoretically established and dubbed “extraordinary”. They can only happen if the surface interactions are much stronger than the bulk ones. While theoretically possible, they have been hardly realized in any materials so far. Here, we demonstrate the presence of an extraordinary phase transition in bulk CrSBr, a van der Waals (vdW) antiferromagnet (AFM). Using a combination of various second harmonic generation (SHG) techniques, we capture the surface and bulk magnetic phase transitions, spin correlations, as well as distinguish the two degenerate AFM domain states. Density functional theory calculations further identify key factors contributing to the enhanced surface magnetism.

*Office of Naval Research N00014-21-1-2770 and N00014-23-1-2020Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation N031710Alfred P. Sloan foundationUS Air Force Office of Scientific Research FA9550-19-1-0037National Science Foundation DMREF- 1921581 and DMR-1707620W.M. Keck FoundationDepartment of Energy DE-SC0021089 and DE-SC0020184JSPS KAKENHI 22H01181

Publication: arXiv: 2309.01047

Presenters

  • Xiaoyu Guo

    • University of Michigan

Authors

  • Xiaoyu Guo

    • University of Michigan
  • Wenhao Liu

    • University of Texas at Dallas
  • Jonathan Schwartz

    • University of Michigan
  • Suk Hyun Sung

    • University of Michigan
  • Dechen Zhang

    • University of Michigan
  • Makoto Shimizu

    • Kyoto University
  • Aswin Kondusamy

    • the University of Texas at Dallas
    • University of Texas at Dallas
  • Lu Li

    • University of Michigan
  • Kai Sun

    • University of Michigan
  • Hui Deng

    • University of Michigan
  • Harald O Jeschke

    • Okayama Univ
    • Okayama University
  • Igor I Mazin

    • George Mason University
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, George Mason University; Quantum Science and Engineering Centre, George Mason University
  • Robert Hovden

    • University of Michigan
  • Bing Lv

    • The University of Texas at Dallas
    • TCSUH and Department of Chemistry, University of Houston.
  • Liuyan Zhao

    • University of Michigan