Magnetic monopoles in hematite

Researchers have discovered magnetic monopoles 鈥 isolated magnetic charges 鈥 in a material closely related to rust, a result that could be used to power greener and faster computing technologies.

If monopoles did exist, and we were able to isolate them, it would be like finding a missing puzzle piece that was assumed to be lost

Mete Atat眉re

Researchers led by the 国际米兰对阵科莫 used a technique known as diamond quantum sensing to observe swirling textures and faint magnetic signals on the surface of hematite, a type of iron oxide.

The researchers observed that magnetic monopoles in hematite emerge through the collective behaviour of many spins (the angular momentum of a particle). These monopoles glide across the swirling textures on the surface of the hematite, like tiny hockey pucks of magnetic charge. This is the first time that naturally occurring emergent monopoles have been observed experimentally.

The research has also shown the direct connection between the previously hidden swirling textures and the magnetic charges of materials like hematite, as if there is a secret code linking them together. The , which could be useful in enabling next-generation logic and memory applications, are reported in the journal Nature Materials.

According to the equations of James Clerk Maxwell, a giant of 国际米兰对阵科莫 physics, magnetic objects, whether a fridge magnet or the Earth itself, must always exist as a pair of magnetic poles that cannot be isolated.

鈥淭he magnets we use every day have two poles: north and south,鈥 said Professor Mete Atat眉re, who led the research. 鈥淚n the 19th century, it was hypothesised that monopoles could exist. But in one of his foundational equations for the study of electromagnetism, James Clerk Maxwell disagreed.鈥

Atat眉re is Head of 国际米兰对阵科莫鈥檚 Cavendish Laboratory, a position once held by Maxwell himself. 鈥淚f monopoles did exist, and we were able to isolate them, it would be like finding a missing puzzle piece that was assumed to be lost,鈥 he said.

About 15 years ago, scientists suggested how monopoles could exist in a magnetic material. This theoretical result relied on the extreme separation of north and south poles so that locally each pole appeared isolated in an exotic material called spin ice.

However, there is an alternative strategy to find monopoles, involving the concept of emergence. The idea of emergence is the combination of many physical entities can give rise to properties that are either more than or different to the sum of their parts.

Working with colleagues from the University of Oxford and the National University of Singapore, the 国际米兰对阵科莫 researchers used emergence to uncover monopoles spread over two-dimensional space, gliding across the swirling textures on the surface of a magnetic material.

The swirling topological textures are found in two main types of materials: ferromagnets and antiferromagnets. Of the two, antiferromagnets are more stable than ferromagnets, but they are more difficult to study, as they don鈥檛 have a strong magnetic signature.

To study the behaviour of antiferromagnets, Atat眉re and his colleagues use an imaging technique known as diamond quantum magnetometry. This technique uses a single spin 鈥 the inherent angular momentum of an electron 鈥 in a diamond needle to precisely measure the magnetic field on the surface of a material, without affecting its behaviour.

For the current study, the researchers used the technique to look at hematite, an antiferromagnetic iron oxide material. To their surprise, they found hidden patterns of magnetic charges within hematite, including monopoles, dipoles and quadrupoles.

鈥淢onopoles had been predicted theoretically, but this is the first time we鈥檝e actually seen a two-dimensional monopole in a naturally occurring magnet,鈥 said co-author Professor Paolo Radaelli, from the University of Oxford.

鈥淭hese monopoles are a collective state of many spins that twirl around a singularity rather than a single fixed particle, so they emerge through many-body interactions. The result is a tiny, localised stable particle with diverging magnetic field coming out of it,鈥 said co-first author Dr Hariom Jani, from the University of Oxford.

鈥淲e鈥檝e shown how diamond quantum magnetometry could be used to unravel the mysterious behaviour of magnetism in two-dimensional quantum materials, which could open up new fields of study in this area,鈥 said co-first author Dr Anthony Tan, from the Cavendish Laboratory. 鈥淭he challenge has always been direct imaging of these textures in antiferromagnets due to their weaker magnetic pull, but now we鈥檙e able to do so, with a nice combination of diamonds and rust.鈥

The study not only highlights the potential of diamond quantum magnetometry but also underscores its capacity to uncover and investigate hidden magnetic phenomena in quantum materials. If controlled, these swirling textures dressed in magnetic charges could power super-fast and energy-efficient computer memory logic.

The research was supported in part by the Royal Society, the Sir Henry Royce Institute, the European Union, and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI).

Reference:
K C Tan, Hariom Jani, Michael H枚gen et al. 鈥.鈥 Nature Materials (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-023-01737-4.

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