Abstract

Noncollinear antiferromagnets with a D0$_{19}$ (space group = 194, P6$_{3}$/mmc) hexagonal structure have garnered much attention for their potential applications in topological spintronics. Here, we report the deposition of continuous epitaxial thin films of such a material, Mn$_{3}$Sn, and characterize their crystal structure using a combination of x-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy. Growth of Mn$_{3}$Sn films with both (0001) c-axis orientation and (40$\bar{4}$3) texture is achieved. In the latter case, the thin films exhibit a small uncompensated Mn moment in the basal plane, quantified via magnetometry and x-ray magnetic circular dichroism experiments. This cannot account for the large anomalous Hall effect simultaneously observed in these films, even at room temperature, with magnitude $\sigma_{\mathrm{xy}}$ ($\mu_{0}H$ = 0 T) = 21 $\mathrm{\Omega}^{-1}\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$ and coercive field $\mu_{0}H_{\mathrm{C}}$ = 1.3 T. We attribute the origin of this anomalous Hall effect to momentum-space Berry curvature arising from the symmetry-breaking inverse triangular spin structure of Mn$_{3}$Sn. Upon cooling through the transition to a glassy ferromagnetic state at around 50 K, a peak in the Hall resistivity close to the coercive field indicates the onset of a topological Hall effect contribution, due to the emergence of a scalar spin chirality generating a real-space Berry phase. We demonstrate that the polarity of this topological Hall effect, and hence the chiral-nature of the noncoplanar magnetic structure driving it, can be controlled using different field cooling conditions.

Highlights

  • Antiferromagnets (AF) are of interest for spintronic applications [1]; they struggle to produce readout signals of the size required for devices

  • We report the deposition of continuous epitaxial thin films of such a material, Mn3Sn, and characterize their crystal structure using a combination of x-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy

  • We demonstrate that the polarity of this topological Hall effect, and the chiral nature of the noncoplanar magnetic structure driving it, can be controlled using different field-cooling conditions

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Antiferromagnets (AF) are of interest for spintronic applications [1]; they struggle to produce readout signals of the size required for devices. The inverse triangular AF order breaks time-reversal symmetry, introducing momentum-space Berry curvature This induces a fictitious magnetic field, which has been theoretically predicted [6] to drive a highly anisotropic AHE [7]. Kerr microscopy imaging of this effect reveals that Mn3Sn contains AF domains possessing opposite chiralities of the noncollinear spin structure. The applied magnetic field couples to the small uncompensated magnetic moment [25] that is created in the hexagonal crystal planes of Mn3Sn by spins spontaneously canting slightly towards magnetocrystalline easy axes [26] This weak magnetization can freely rotate within the basal plane [5], in turn acting to orient the entire inverse triangular spin texture, and, when saturated, achieving a single chiral domain state. We extend these previous results by studying the structural and magnetic properties of epitaxial Mn3Sn thin films, and demonstrating the presence of both AHE and THE

Film growth and structural characterization
Magnetic properties
Magnetotransport measurements
CONCLUSION
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