Spin waves in Dirac semimetal Ca0.6Sr0.4MnSb2 investigated with neutrons by the diffraction method

Abstract

We report neutron diffraction measurements of Ca0.6Sr0.4MnSb2, a low-carrier-density Dirac semimetal in which the antiferromagnetic Mn layers are interleaved with Sb layers that host Dirac fermions. We have discovered that we can detect a good quality inelastic spin wave signal from a small (m ~ 0.28 g) single crystal sample by the diffraction method, without energy analysis, using a neutron diffractometer with a position-sensitive area detector; the spin-waves appear as diffuse scattering that is shaped by energy-momentum conservation. By fitting this characteristic magnetic scattering to a spin-wave model, we refine all parameters of the model spin Hamiltonian, including the inter-plane interaction, through use of a three-dimensional measurement in reciprocal space. We also measure the temperature dependence of the spin waves, including the softening of the spin gap on approaching the Neel temperature, TN. Not only do our results provide important new insights into an interplay of magnetism and Dirac electrons, they also establish a new, high-throughput approach to characterizing magnetic excitations on a modern diffractometer without direct energy analysis. Our work opens exciting new opportunities for the follow-up parametric and compositional studies on small, ~0.1 g crystals.

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