Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Wk 22 Electronics Supply Chain Digest

    Samsung Electro-Mechanics High Capacitance MLCCs for ADAS SoCs

    Murata Expands its Automotive Common Mode Choke Coils to 150C and High Current Capability

    Bourns Releases New Current Transformer

    Skeleton Releases GrapheneGPU to Reduce AI Energy Consumption by 44% and Boosts Power by 40%

    VINATech Expands Aluminum Capacitor Portfolio with Acquisition of Enesol

    binder Offers Wide Range of M12 Panel Mount Connectors

    Bourns Releases New Shielded Power Inductors for DDR5

    Supercapacitors Benefits in Industrial Valve Fail-Safe Control Systems

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    Coupled Inductors Circuit Model and Examples of its Applications

    Inductor Resonances and its Impact to EMI

    Highly Reliable Flex Rigid PCBs, Würth Elektronik Webinar

    Causes of Oscillations in Flyback Converters

    How to design a 60W Flyback Transformer

    Modeling and Simulation of Leakage Inductance

    Power Inductor Considerations for AI High Power Computing – Vishay Video

    Coupled Inductors in Multiphase Boost Converters

    VPG Demonstrates Precision Resistor in Cryogenic Conditions

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • Events
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Wk 22 Electronics Supply Chain Digest

    Samsung Electro-Mechanics High Capacitance MLCCs for ADAS SoCs

    Murata Expands its Automotive Common Mode Choke Coils to 150C and High Current Capability

    Bourns Releases New Current Transformer

    Skeleton Releases GrapheneGPU to Reduce AI Energy Consumption by 44% and Boosts Power by 40%

    VINATech Expands Aluminum Capacitor Portfolio with Acquisition of Enesol

    binder Offers Wide Range of M12 Panel Mount Connectors

    Bourns Releases New Shielded Power Inductors for DDR5

    Supercapacitors Benefits in Industrial Valve Fail-Safe Control Systems

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    Coupled Inductors Circuit Model and Examples of its Applications

    Inductor Resonances and its Impact to EMI

    Highly Reliable Flex Rigid PCBs, Würth Elektronik Webinar

    Causes of Oscillations in Flyback Converters

    How to design a 60W Flyback Transformer

    Modeling and Simulation of Leakage Inductance

    Power Inductor Considerations for AI High Power Computing – Vishay Video

    Coupled Inductors in Multiphase Boost Converters

    VPG Demonstrates Precision Resistor in Cryogenic Conditions

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result

Physicists Linking Magnetism and Electronic-​band Topology for Possible Applications in Electronic Components

6.4.2020
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Antiferromagnetic (top) and canted-​antiferromagnetic order (bottom). In the latter case the spins are canted relative to the easy c-​axis, leading to a ferromagnetic contribution in the plane orthogonal to that axis (represented by green arrows). source: ETH Zurich

Antiferromagnetic (top) and canted-​antiferromagnetic order (bottom). In the latter case the spins are canted relative to the easy c-​axis, leading to a ferromagnetic contribution in the plane orthogonal to that axis (represented by green arrows). source: ETH Zurich

Materials that combine topological electronic properties and quantum magnetism are of high current interest, for the quantum many-​body physics that can unfold in them and for possible applications in electronic components. For one such material, ETH physicists have now established the microscopic mechanism linking magnetism and electronic-​band topology.

Dirac matter is an intriguing class of materials with rather peculiar properties: electrons in these materials behave as if they had no mass. The most prominent Dirac material is graphene, but further members have been discovered during the past 15 years or so. Each one of them serves as a rich playground for exploring ‘exotic’ electronic behaviours, some of which hold the promise to enable novel components for electronics.

RelatedPosts

Wk 22 Electronics Supply Chain Digest

Samsung Electro-Mechanics High Capacitance MLCCs for ADAS SoCs

Murata Expands its Automotive Common Mode Choke Coils to 150C and High Current Capability

However, even if Dirac matter and other so-​called topological materials — in which electrons behave in similarly unexpected ways — are among the currently most intensively studied condensed-​matter systems, there are only very few examples where the topology of the electronic bands is connected in a well-​defined manner to the magnetic properties of the materials.

One material in which such interplay between topological electronic states and magnetism has been observed is CaMnBi2, but the mechanism connecting the two remained unclear.

Writing in Physical Review Letters [1], postdoc Run Yang and PhD student Matteo Corasaniti from the Optical Spectroscopy group of Prof. Leonardo Degiorgi at the Laboratory for Solid State Physics, working with colleagues at Brookhaven National Laboratory (US) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, now report a comprehensive study in which they provide clear evidence that it is a slight nudge on the magnetic moments, known as spin canting, that provokes substantial changes in the electronic band structure.

Compass points to the right direction on a bumpy road

CaMnBi2 and the related compound SrMnBi2 have recently attracted attention as they display quantum magnetism — the manganese ions are antiferromagnetically ordered at around room temperature and below — and at the same time they host Dirac electrons. That there is interplay between the two properties has been suspected for some while, not least as at ~50 K there appears an unexpected ‘bump’ in the conduction properties at these materials. But the precise nature of this anomaly was still poorly understood until now.

In earlier work studying optical properties of CaMnBi2 [2], Corasaniti, Yang and co-​workers had established already a link to the electronic properties of the material. They used in particular the fact that the bump-​like anomaly in the transport properties can be shifted in temperature by replacing a proportion of the calcium atoms with sodium atoms.

To get now to the microscopic origins of the observed behaviour, they studied samples with different sodium dopings by torque magnetometry. In this technique, the torque on a magnetic sample is measured when it is exposed to a suitably strong field, similarly as a compass needle aligns with the Earth magnetic field. And this approach proved to point the team to the origins of the anomaly.

A firm link between magnetic and electronic properties

In their magnetic-​torque experiments, the researchers found that at temperatures where no anomaly is observed in the electronic transport measurements, the magnetic behaviour is such as one would expect for an antiferromagnet. This was not the case anymore at lower temperatures, where the anomaly is present. There, a ferromagnetic component appeared, which can be explained by a projection of magnetic moments onto the plane orthogonal to the easy spin c-​axis of the original antiferromagnetic order (see the figure). This phenomenon is known as spin-​canting, induced by a so-​called super-​exchange mechanism.

These two sets of experiments — optical and torque measurements — were supported by dedicated first-​principles calculations. In particular, for the case where spin canting was included in the calculations, a peculiar hybridization between the manganese and bismuth atoms was found to mediate the interlayer magnetic coupling and to govern the electronic properties in the material. Taken together, the study therefore establishes that sought-​after direct link between the magnetic properties and changes to the electronic band structure, reflected in the bump anomaly of the transport properties.

With such detailed understanding on board, the door is now open to exploring not only the electronic properties of CaMnBi2 and related compounds, but also the possibilities arising from the connection between magnetic properties and topological states in these intriguing forms of matter.

References

1. Yang R, Corasaniti M, Le CC, Liao ZY, Wang AF, Du Q, Petrovic C, Qiu XG, Hu JP, Degiorgi L. Spin-canting-induced band reconstruction in the Dirac material Ca1−xNaxMnBi2. Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 137201 (2020). doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.137201

2. Corasaniti M, Yang R, Pal A, Chinotti M, Degiorgi L, Wang A, Petrovic C. Fermi surface gapping in the Dirac material Ca1−xNaxMnBi2. Phys. Rev. B 100, 041107(R) (2019). doi: 10.1103/PhysRevB.100.041107

Related

Source: ETH Zurich

Recent Posts

Murata Expands its Automotive Common Mode Choke Coils to 150C and High Current Capability

29.5.2025
19

Bourns Releases New Current Transformer

29.5.2025
18

Bourns Releases New Shielded Power Inductors for DDR5

29.5.2025
30

Samsung Electro-Mechanics Releases 165C Automotive 0806 Size Power Inductors

21.5.2025
36

Coupled Inductors Circuit Model and Examples of its Applications

21.5.2025
88

TDK Releases 0201 High-Frequency Smallest Inductors

20.5.2025
38

Coilcraft Extends Air Core RF Inductors

20.5.2025
19

Bourns Releases Automotive 1W Flyback Transformer

19.5.2025
30

Inductor Resonances and its Impact to EMI

16.5.2025
77

Würth Elektronik Releases High Performance TLVR Coupled Inductors

15.5.2025
45

Upcoming Events

Jun 4
11:00 - 12:00 CEST

Würth Elektronik PCB Production in Asia

View Calendar

Popular Posts

  • Buck Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boost Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Flyback Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ripple Current and its Effects on the Performance of Capacitors

    3 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 0
  • LLC Resonant Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • What Electronics Engineer Needs to Know About Passive Low Pass Filters

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dual Active Bridge (DAB) Topology Explained

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MLCC and Ceramic Capacitors

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • What is a Dielectric Constant and DF of Plastic Materials?

    4 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 0
  • Wk 22 Electronics Supply Chain Digest

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Newsletter Subscription

 

Passive Components Blog

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • EPCI Membership & Advertisement
  • About

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Premium Suppliers

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version