Noise spectroscopy of unconventional spin transport phenomena in a two-dimensional Heisenberg ferromagnet

ORAL

Abstract

In recent studies, it has been demonstrated that spin transport coefficients in magnetic materials can be extracted through magnetic noise measurements of nearby spin qubits [1]. In this study, we placed nitrogen vacancy centers in close proximity to nanoflakes of CrCl3, a layered two-dimensional Heisenberg magnet, ranging from tens of layers to the monolayer limit. We are able to extract the spectral density of magnetic noise and imaginary susceptibility as functions of temperature and external magnetic field. Below the transition temperature, noise persists down to the lowest measurable temperature (5K), which can be explained by a model of a strongly interacting magnon gas where magnon-magnon collisions significantly influence the spin transport properties.

[1]Wang, Hailong, et al. "Noninvasive measurements of spin transport properties of an antiferromagnetic insulator." Science advances 8.1 (2022): eabg8562.

Presenters

  • Ruolan Xue

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Ruolan Xue

    • Harvard University
  • Nikola Maksimovic

    • Harvard University
  • Liqiao Xia

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Pavel Dolgirev

    • Harvard University
  • Ryota Kitagawa

    • Tokyo Institute of Technology
    • Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo
  • Pablo Jarillo-Herrero

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Eugene Demler

    • ETH
    • ETH Zurich
    • ETH Zürich
    • Institute for Theoretical Physics, ETH Zürich, 8093, Zürich, Switzerland
  • Amir Yacoby

    • Harvard University