Chiral Phonons Enhance Ferromagnetism
Abstract
Recent experiments suggest that the conditions for ferromagnetic order in magnetite can be modified by adsorption of chiral molecules. Especially, the coercivity of a ferromagnetic metal was increased by nearly 100% or 20 times the earth magnetic flux density at room temperature. The coercivity was, moreover, demonstrated to increase linearly with the temperature in a finite range around room temperature. On the basis of these results, a mechanism is proposed for providing the necessary enhancement of magnetic anisotropy. It is shown that nuclear vibrations (phonons) coupled to ferromagnetic spin excitations (magnons) absorb the thermal energy in the system, thereby diverting the excess energy that otherwise would excite magnons in the ferromagnet. This energy diversion not only restores the ferromagnetic order but also enhances its stability by increasing the anisotropy energy for magnon excitations. The coupling between phonons with magnons is enabled by chirality due to the lack of inversion symmetry.
Copyright and License
© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society. This publication is licensed under CC-BY 4.0.
Acknowledgement
Jonas Fransson acknowledges support from Stiftelsen Olle Engkvist Byggmästare. Yossi Paltiel acknowledges the funding from Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions under the Horizon Europe Framework Program (CISSE Project 101071886), Carl Zeiss Stiftung (HYMMS Project P2022-03-044), and U.S. Air Force (Grant FA8655-24-1-7390). Yael Kapon thanks the Israel Council of Higher Education’s VTT Fellowship for Women in STEM. S. Furkan Ozturk and Dimitar D. Sasselov acknowledge the Harvard Origins of Life Initiative for funding and its members for fruitful discussions. S. Furkan Ozturk also acknowledges the Kavli-Laukien Fellowship Program and the Kavli and Laukien Foundations for generous research funding and travel support.
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:0f1eb96b29d6319426d841fde2a1986e
|
2.3 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC11873915
- PMID
- 39965120
- Signhild Engkvists Stiftelse
- European Commission
- 101071886
- Carl Zeiss Foundation
- P2022-03-044
- United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research
- FA8655-24-1-7390
- Israel Council of Higher Education
- Harvard Origins of Life Initiative
- Kavli and Laukien Foundations
- Accepted
-
2025-02-12
- Available
-
2025-02-18Published online
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)
- Publication Status
- Published