First-principles perspective on magnetic second sound

Paweł Buczek, Nadine Buczek, Giovanni Vignale, and Arthur Ernst
Phys. Rev. B 101, 214420 – Published 11 June 2020

Abstract

The fluctuations of the magnetic order parameter, or longitudinal spin excitations, are investigated theoretically in the ferromagnetic Fe and Ni as well as in the antiferromagnetic phase of the pnictide superconductor FeSe. The charge and spin dynamics of these systems is described by evaluating the generalized charge and spin density response function calculated from first-principles linear response time-dependent density functional theory within adiabatic local spin density approximation. We observe that the formally noninteracting Kohn-Sham system features strong coupling between the magnetization and charge dynamics in the longitudinal channel and that the coupling is effectively removed upon the inclusion of the Coulomb interaction in the charge channel and the resulting appearance of plasmons. The longitudinal spin fluctuations acquire a collective character without the emergence of the Goldstone boson, similar to the case of paramagnon excitations in nonmagnetic metals like Pd. In ferromagnetic Fe and Ni the longitudinal spin dynamics is governed by interactions between low-energy intraband electron-hole pairs while in quasi-two-dimensional antiferromagnet FeSe it is dominated by the interband transitions with energies of the order of exchange splitting. In the later material, the collective longitudinal magnetization fluctuations feature well-defined energies and long lifetimes for small momenta and appear below the particle-hole continuum. The modes become strongly Landau damped for growing wave vectors. We relate our theoretical findings to existing experimental spinpolarized electron energy loss spectroscopy results. In bulk bcc Fe, the longitudinal magnetic modes appear above the typical energies of transverse spin-waves, have energies comparable with the Stoner spin-flip excitation continuum and are order of magnitude less energetic than the charge dynamics.

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  • Received 27 April 2020
  • Revised 24 May 2020
  • Accepted 26 May 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.101.214420

©2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Paweł Buczek*

  • Department of Engineering and Computer Sciences, Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Berliner Tor 7, 20099 Hamburg, Germany

Nadine Buczek

  • Department of Applied Natural Sciences, Lübeck University of Applied Sciences, Mönkhofer Weg 239, 23562 Lübeck, Germany

Giovanni Vignale

  • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Missouri, 223 Physics Building, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA

Arthur Ernst

  • Institute for Theoretical Physics, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenberger Straße 69, 4040 Linz, Austria and Max-Planck-Institut of Microstructure Physics, Weinberg 2, 06120 Halle (Saale), Germany

  • *Corresponding author: pawel.buczek@haw-hamburg.de

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Issue

Vol. 101, Iss. 21 — 1 June 2020

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