Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator

Nonequilibrium phenomena are ubiquitous in nature and in a wide range of systems, including cold atomic gases and solid-state materials. While these phenomena are challenging to describe both theoretically and experimentally, they are essential for the fundamental understanding of many-body systems...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kevin S. Olsson, Kyongmo An, Gregory A. Fiete, Jianshi Zhou, Li Shi, Xiaoqin Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2020-05-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.021029
id doaj-5569b3af9caa435dabcbe6f577467722
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5569b3af9caa435dabcbe6f5774677222020-11-25T02:10:43ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082020-05-0110202102910.1103/PhysRevX.10.021029Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic InsulatorKevin S. OlssonKyongmo AnGregory A. FieteJianshi ZhouLi ShiXiaoqin LiNonequilibrium phenomena are ubiquitous in nature and in a wide range of systems, including cold atomic gases and solid-state materials. While these phenomena are challenging to describe both theoretically and experimentally, they are essential for the fundamental understanding of many-body systems and practical devices. In the context of spintronics, when a magnetic insulator (MI) is subjected to a thermal gradient, a pure spin current is generated in the form of magnons without the presence and dissipation of a charge current—attractive for reducing energy consumption and central to the emerging field of spin caloritronics. However, the experimental methods for directly quantifying a spin current in insulators and for probing local phonon-magnon nonequilibrium and the associated magnon chemical potential are largely missing. Here, we apply a heating laser to generate a thermal gradient in the MI yttrium iron garnet (YIG), Y_{3}Fe_{5}O_{12}, and evaluate two components of the spin current, driven by temperature and chemical potential gradients, respectively. The experimental method and theory approach for evaluating quasiparticle chemical potential can be applied for analogous phenomena in other many-body systems.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.021029
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kevin S. Olsson
Kyongmo An
Gregory A. Fiete
Jianshi Zhou
Li Shi
Xiaoqin Li
spellingShingle Kevin S. Olsson
Kyongmo An
Gregory A. Fiete
Jianshi Zhou
Li Shi
Xiaoqin Li
Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator
Physical Review X
author_facet Kevin S. Olsson
Kyongmo An
Gregory A. Fiete
Jianshi Zhou
Li Shi
Xiaoqin Li
author_sort Kevin S. Olsson
title Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator
title_short Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator
title_full Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator
title_fullStr Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator
title_full_unstemmed Pure Spin Current and Magnon Chemical Potential in a Nonequilibrium Magnetic Insulator
title_sort pure spin current and magnon chemical potential in a nonequilibrium magnetic insulator
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Nonequilibrium phenomena are ubiquitous in nature and in a wide range of systems, including cold atomic gases and solid-state materials. While these phenomena are challenging to describe both theoretically and experimentally, they are essential for the fundamental understanding of many-body systems and practical devices. In the context of spintronics, when a magnetic insulator (MI) is subjected to a thermal gradient, a pure spin current is generated in the form of magnons without the presence and dissipation of a charge current—attractive for reducing energy consumption and central to the emerging field of spin caloritronics. However, the experimental methods for directly quantifying a spin current in insulators and for probing local phonon-magnon nonequilibrium and the associated magnon chemical potential are largely missing. Here, we apply a heating laser to generate a thermal gradient in the MI yttrium iron garnet (YIG), Y_{3}Fe_{5}O_{12}, and evaluate two components of the spin current, driven by temperature and chemical potential gradients, respectively. The experimental method and theory approach for evaluating quasiparticle chemical potential can be applied for analogous phenomena in other many-body systems.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.021029
work_keys_str_mv AT kevinsolsson purespincurrentandmagnonchemicalpotentialinanonequilibriummagneticinsulator
AT kyongmoan purespincurrentandmagnonchemicalpotentialinanonequilibriummagneticinsulator
AT gregoryafiete purespincurrentandmagnonchemicalpotentialinanonequilibriummagneticinsulator
AT jianshizhou purespincurrentandmagnonchemicalpotentialinanonequilibriummagneticinsulator
AT lishi purespincurrentandmagnonchemicalpotentialinanonequilibriummagneticinsulator
AT xiaoqinli purespincurrentandmagnonchemicalpotentialinanonequilibriummagneticinsulator
_version_ 1715553678425849856