Abstract

Energy bands in antiferromagnets are supposed to be spin degenerate in the absence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Recent studies [Physical Review B 102, 01 4422 (2020)] identified formal symmetry conditions for antiferromagnetic crystals in which this degeneracy can be lifted - spin splitting - even in the vanishing SOC (i.e., non-relativistic) limit. Materials having such symmetries could enable spin-split antiferromagnetic spintronics without the burden of using heavy atom compounds. However, the symmetry conditions that involve spin and magnetic symmetry are not always effective as practical material selection filters. Furthermore, these symmetry conditions do not readily disclose trends in the magnitude and momentum dependence of the spin splitting energy. Here, we show that the formal symmetry conditions enabling spin-split antiferromagnets can be interpreted in terms of local motif pairs, such as octahedra or tetrahedra, each carrying opposite magnetic moments. Collinear antiferromagnets with such spin-structure motif pair whose components interconvert by neither translation nor spatial inversion will show spin splitting. Such a real-space motif-based approach enables an easy way to identify and design materials (illustrated in real example materials) having spin splitting without the need for spin-orbit coupling and offers insights into the momentum dependence and magnitude of the spin splitting. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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