Abstract
The features of spin and charge transport in conductive helimagnets, which are due to the action of an inhomogeneous exchange magnetic field on the spin of conduction electrons, are theoretically studied. The interaction between the spin of moving particles and an inhomogeneous external magnetic field was first recorded in the famous Stern-Gerlach experiment that investigated the quantum nature of spin. In the present paper, we have demonstrated that two physical effects---the electrical magnetochiral effect (EMChE) and the kinetic magnetoelectric effect (KMEE)---can be explained through the interaction of the spins of itinerant electrons in chiral helimagnets with spatially inhomogeneous effective magnetic field of exchange origin. All parameters of the EMChE and KMEE are presented in terms of both the characteristic frequencies of spin relaxation of conduction electrons in a helimagnet and the frequencies of their Larmor precession in external and internal exchange fields. It has been shown that the effective frequency of conduction-electron spin relaxation in a helimagnet contains three components: (i) the rate of spin-lattice relaxation caused by spin-orbit scattering of conduction electrons by defects of the crystal lattice, (ii) the rate of change in the average spin of electrons due to their ``diffusion'' escape from a region with a given direction of the average spin to a region with a different direction of spin density, and (iii) the contribution of the Larmor precession of the spins of electrons moving in the helimagnet's exchange field that assigns the precession axis altering its direction in space. The peculiarities of the EMChE and KMEE that substantially depend on the ratio of the above-listed spin relaxation rates and the angular frequencies of electron precession are described. The numerical estimates performed show that the mechanism of generating EMChE provides the effect magnitude sufficient to be experimentally detected in metallic helimagnets. The frequency regions of spin relaxation and spin precession are determined to observe a giant electrical magnetochiral effect and resonant behavior of the chiral magnetoresistance. We have called the appropriate effect ``magnetochiral kinetic resonance'' (MChKR). The physical nature of MChKR is elucidated. The latter arises due to the coincidence of the Larmor precession frequency of an electron in the effective field and the phase change frequency of the helicoidal exchange field acting on the electron moving along the helicoid's axis with a speed equal to that of the electron flow. We have demonstrated how the experimental studies of the KMEE can be used to directly determine the chirality of helimagnets.
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