| Literature DB >> 32010774 |
M Hofherr1,2, S Häuser1, J K Dewhurst3, P Tengdin4, S Sakshath1, H T Nembach4,5, S T Weber1, J M Shaw5, T J Silva5, H C Kapteyn4, M Cinchetti6, B Rethfeld1, M M Murnane4, D Steil7, B Stadtmüller1,2, S Sharma8, M Aeschlimann1, S Mathias7.
Abstract
The vision of using light to manipulate electronic and spin excitations in materials on their fundamental time and length scales requires new approaches in experiment and theory to observe and understand these excitations. The ultimate speed limit for all-optical manipulation requires control schemes for which the electronic or magnetic subsystems of the materials are coherently manipulated on the time scale of the laser excitation pulse. In our work, we provide experimental evidence of such a direct, ultrafast, and coherent spin transfer between two magnetic subsystems of an alloy of Fe and Ni. Our experimental findings are fully supported by time-dependent density functional theory simulations and, hence, suggest the possibility of coherently controlling spin dynamics on subfemtosecond time scales, i.e., the birth of the research area of attomagnetism.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32010774 PMCID: PMC6968944 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aay8717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136
Fig. 1Ultrafast OISTR in Fe50Ni50.
(A) Schematic overview of the OISTR effect in Fe50Ni50. The optical excitation by the IR pump leads to an effective spin transfer from the occupied Ni minority channel into the Fe minority channel. Note that other excitations are also possible, and significant OISTR can only be expected if such a spin transfer transition dominates the full excitation process. (B) Projected density of states (DOS) calculation for Fe50Ni50 for Fe (green) and Ni (blue) demonstrating the favorable spin transfer from Ni to Fe in the minority channel. (C and D) TD-DFT calculations of the difference of the transient occupation compared with the unexcited case in the minority channels of Ni (C) and Fe (D) at characteristic time steps demonstrating the OISTR effect. In Ni at energies between 0.5 and 3 eV below the Fermi level, a negative signal arises corresponding to a loss of minority electrons, while a simultaneous positive signal correlating to minority spin gain is visible in Fe at equivalent energies above the Fermi level.
Fig. 2Schematic of the conducted OISTR experiment.
(A) Experimental setup. An EUV probe pulse investigates the element-specific magnetization dynamics in Fe50Ni50 triggered by an IR pump. (B) Magnetic asymmetry of Fe and Ni plotted as a function of the photon energy. The shaded green and blue energy ranges mark the energy range that is commonly integrated in an absorption edge experiment to obtain the total magnetization.
Fig. 3Direct time-resolved verification of the OISTR effect on ultrashort time scales.
(A) Static magnetic asymmetry of Fe and Ni plotted as a function of the energy relative to the Fermi level, i.e., the measured photon energy after subtracting the M3 core level energy. (B and C) Spectral dynamics of the magnetic asymmetry of Fe and Ni for different spectral regions. (B) In the energy regions marked in (A) by the shaded colored bars according to the calculations shown in Fig. 1, the spin dynamics show a clear fingerprint of OISTR, on ≈50-fs time scales. (C) In contrast, other spectral regions display only the conventional demagnetization caused by multistep relaxation processes. The inset shows the demagnetization dynamics on a longer time scale, revealing a quenching level of ~25% to which all spectral regions converge. Note that the integrated signals averaging over extended spectral regions show the typical delayed behavior between Fe and Ni (see the Supplementary Materials), as seen before (). The characteristic energies that are analyzed are marked in (A) with the dashed lines.