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High-Pressure Tuning of Magnon-Polarons in the Layered Antiferromagnet FePS3

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2022

Abstract

Magnetic layered materials have emerged recently as promising systems to introduce magnetism in structures based on two-dimensional (2D) materials and to investigate exotic magnetic ground states in the 2D limit. In this work, we apply high hydrostatic pressures up to P ~ 8.7 GPa to the bulk layered antiferromagnet FePS(3) to tune the collective lattice excitations (phonons) in resonance with magnetic excitations (magnons).

Close to P = 4 GPa, the magnon-phonon resonance is achieved, and the strong coupling between these collective modes leads to the formation of new quasiparticles, the magnon-polarons, evidenced in our low-temperature Raman scattering experiments by a particular avoided crossing behavior between the phonon and the doubly degenerate antiferromagnetic magnon. At the pressure-induced magnon-phonon resonance, three distinct coupled modes emerge.

As it is mainly defined by intralayer properties, we show that the energy of the magnon is nearly pressure-independent. We additionally apply high magnetic fields up to B = 30 T to fully identify and characterize the magnon excitations and to explore the different magnon-polaron regimes for which the phonon has an energy lower than, equal to, or higher than the magnon energy.

The description of our experimental data requires introducing a phonon-phonon coupling not taken into account in actual calculations.