Shearing of atomic layers in layered iron phosphorus trisulfide is caused by the scrambling of electron spin upon exposure to a light pulse. Ordered spins on left of image; scrambled spins on right. Image: Argonne National Laboratory.
Shearing of atomic layers in layered iron phosphorus trisulfide is caused by the scrambling of electron spin upon exposure to a light pulse. Ordered spins on left of image; scrambled spins on right. Image: Argonne National Laboratory.

A little over a century ago, physicists Albert Einstein and Wander de Haas reported a surprising effect with an iron-based ferromagnet, otherwise known as a traditional magnet. If you suspend an iron cylinder from a wire and expose it to a magnetic field, it will start rotating if you simply reverse the direction of the magnetic field.

“Einstein and de Haas’s experiment is almost like a magic show,” said Haidan Wen, a physicist in the Materials Science and X-ray Science divisions of the US Department of Energy (DOE)’s Argonne National Laboratory. “You can cause a cylinder to rotate without ever touching it.”

Now, in a paper in Nature, a team of researchers from Argonne and other US national laboratories and universities report an analogous yet different effect in an ‘anti’-ferromagnet. This could have important applications in devices requiring ultra-precise and ultrafast motion control. One example is high-speed nanomotors for biomedical applications, such as used in nanorobots for minimally invasive diagnosis and surgery.

The difference between a ferromagnet and antiferromagnet has to do with a property called electron spin. This spin has a direction. Scientists represent the direction with an arrow, which can point up or down or any direction in between. In a magnetized ferromagnet, the arrows associated with all the electrons in the iron atoms can point in the same direction, say, up. Reversing the magnetic field reverses the direction of the electron spins. So, all arrows are now pointing down. This reversal leads to the cylinder’s rotation.

“In this experiment, a microscopic property, electron spin, is exploited to elicit a mechanical response in a cylinder, a macroscopic object,” said Alfred Zong, a research fellow at the University of California, Berkeley.

In antiferromagnets, instead of the electron spins all pointing up, for example, they alternate between up and down in adjacent electrons. These opposite spins cancel each other out, and antiferromagnets thus do not respond to changes in a magnetic field as ferromagnets do.

“The question we asked ourselves is, can electron spin elicit a response in an antiferromagnet that is different but similar in spirit to that from the cylinder rotation in the Einstein-de Hass experiment?” Wen said.

To answer that question, the team prepared a sample of iron phosphorus trisulfide (FePS3), an antiferromagnet. The sample consisted of multiple layers of FePS3, with each layer just a few atoms thick.

“Unlike a traditional magnet, FePS3 is special because it is formed in a layered structure, in which the interaction between the layers is extremely weak,” said Xiaodong Xu, professor of physics and materials science at the University of Washington. 

“We designed a set of corroborative experiments in which we shot ultrafast laser pulses at this layered material and measured the resultant changes in material properties with optical, X-ray and electron pulses,” Wen added.

The team found that the pulses changed the magnetic property of the material by scrambling the ordered orientation of electron spins. The arrows for electron spin no longer alternate between up and down in an orderly fashion but are disordered. 

“This scrambling in electron spin leads to a mechanical response across the entire sample,” explained Nuh Gedik, professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). “Because the interaction between layers is weak, one layer of the sample is able to slide back and forth with respect to an adjacent layer.”

This motion is ultrafast, 10 to 100 picoseconds per oscillation. One picosecond equals one trillionth of a second. This is so fast that in one picosecond, light travels a mere third of a millimeter.

Measurements on samples with spatial resolution at the atomic scale and temporal resolution measured in picoseconds require world-class scientific facilities. To that end, the team relied on cutting-edge ultrafast probes that use electron and X-ray beams to analyze atomic structures.

Motivated by optical measurements at the University of Washington, the initial studies employed the mega-electronvolt ultrafast electron diffraction facility at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. Further studies were performed with an ultrafast electron diffraction setup at MIT. These results were complemented by work at the ultrafast electron microscope facility in the Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM) and the 11-BM and 7-ID beamlines at the Advanced Photon Source (APS). Both CNM and APS are DOE Office of Science user facilities at Argonne.

The electron spin in a layered antiferromagnet also has an effect at longer timescales than picoseconds. In an earlier study using APS and CNM facilities, members of the team observed that fluctuating motions of the layers slowed down dramatically near the transition from disordered to ordered behavior for the electron spins.

“The pivotal discovery in our current research was finding a link between electron spin and atomic motion that is special to the layered structure of this antiferromagnet,” Zong said. “And because this link manifests at such short time and tiny length scales, we envision that the ability to control this motion by changing the magnetic field or, alternatively, by applying a tiny strain will have important implications for nanoscale devices.”

This story is adapted from material from Argonne National Laboratory, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.