Uncovering the Timescales of Spin Reorientation in TbMn6Sn6
Abstract
Kagome ferrimagnets are of fundamental interest because of their tunable magnetic, electronic and topological properties, with potential applications for quantum-enabled technologies and spintronics. Here we present the first direct measurement of the intrinsic timescale of the spin reorientation transition in the Kagome ferrimagnet TbMn6Sn6. This material exhibits a magnetic phase transition near room temperature, where spins remain collinear while the total magnetic moment rotates from out-of-plane to in-plane. This reorientation has been attributed to the competing anisotropies of Tb and Mn, whose magnetic moments have very different temperature dependencies. By probing at the Mn M-edge using high harmonic extreme ultraviolet pulses, we measure reorientation timescales between 6 and 18 ps, depending on the laser excitation fluence. Our model of the magnetization dynamics shows that this timescale is consistent with a spin reorientation driven by very large anisotropy energies, on meV energy scales. Our model also predicts a possibility of a 180 reorientation of the out-of-plane moment, that could facilitate optically controlled magnetization switching between very stable ground states, for applications in spintronics or data storage.
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