The observation of topologically protected magnetic quasiparticles

The observation of topologically protected magnetic quasiparticles
Neutron inelastic scattering spectrometer AMATERAS installed at MLF, J-PARC. Credit: J-PARC(KEK/JAEA)

A team of researchers from Tohoku University, J-PARC, and Tokyo Institute of Technology conducted an in-depth study of magnetic quasiparticles called "triplons." The team conducted the study with a low-dimensional quantum magnet, Ba2CuSi2O6Cl2, using neutron inelastic scattering by AMATERAS at J-PARC. Their findings lead to the discovery of a new "topologically protected triplon edge state" in the aforementioned compound.

The conceptual discovery of a topological insulator generates attention from a fundamental and technological aspect. The study showed that we can expect a non-dissipative electron flow, otherwise known as an "," to appear on the surface of topological insulators due to the difference in topological characteristics between the inside and outside of the .

Tremendous efforts have been made to realize the topological edge state in real two-dimensional and three-dimensional electronic materials since this non-dissipative flow has the potential be utilized for energy-efficient information transmission and processing in the future.

The edge-state concept not only applies to electrons, but to quasiparticles, which carry spin current in materials, emerging from electron spin fluctuations such as magnons and triplons. However, to date, only few examples have demonstrated bosonic quasiparticles with topological characters.

Using neutron by AMATERAS at J-PARC, the team was able to precisely determine the dispersion relations of triplons in the quantum magnet Ba2CuSi2O6Cl2. The observed dispersion relations fix parameters in the model Hamiltonian, which indeed, show that the compound is a new realization of the Su-Schriffer-Heeger (SSH) model—the most fundamental model to ascertain topological insulators. The SSH model is renowned for being equivalent to a single spin under a fictitious magnetic field. The dispersion relations, as well as the fictitious magnetic field, are shown in the title image.

The observation of topologically protected magnetic quasiparticles
The schematic view of the calculated dispersion of triplons in Ba2CuSi2O6Cl2 in the reciprocal lattice space. Triangular pyramids represent fictitious magnetic fields. Credit: Kazuhiro Nawa

As the quasiparticle moves from left to right in the figure, a fictitious magnetic field makes a single rotation. Simultaneously, phases rotate halfway, leading to a nontrivial topology. This nontrivial topology of triplons stipulates that edge states exist in the middle of the energy gap of Ba2CuSi2O6Cl2.The observation of topological triplons should accelerate the detection of magnetic and thermodynamic properties of edge states, and may lead to the further development of energy efficient information transmission and processing materials.

More information: Kazuhiro Nawa et al. Triplon band splitting and topologically protected edge states in the dimerized antiferromagnet, Nature Communications (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10091-6

Journal information: Nature Communications

Provided by Tohoku University

Citation: The observation of topologically protected magnetic quasiparticles (2019, June 26) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2019-06-topologically-magnetic-quasiparticles.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Physicists take a step closer to building a graphene-based topological insulator

0 shares

Feedback to editors