Origin of large effective phonon magnetic moments in monolayer MoS<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Circularly polarized lattice vibrations or chiral phonons carry finite angular momentum that leads to phonon Zeeman splitting in external magnetic fields. Recent helicity-resolved magneto-Raman spectroscopy measurements demonstrate giant effective magnetic moments of ~2.5μB in monolayer MoS2, while a microscopic picture of the intriguing phenomena remains lacking. In this work, we show that the orbital transition between the split conduction bands (△0=4 meV) of MoS2 couples to the doubly degenerate E’’ phonon mode (ω0=33 meV), forming two hybridized states. The one with predominantly chiral phonon contribution appears at ~270 cm-1 in the helicity-switched channels, while the one with primarily orbital contribution appears at ~30 cm-1 in the helicity-conserved channels. Based on this model, we reproduce the giant effective magnetic moments of chiral phonon in MoS2 and explain its thermal dynamics properties. Our results generalize the orbital-phonon coupling model of phonon magnetic moments to a new material system beyond the paramagnets and magnets.

*W. J. acknowledges support by NSF Grants No. DMR-2129879 and DMR-2339615. R.H. acknowledges support by NSF Grants No. DMR-2300640 and DMR-2104036. A.J.S. is supported in part by the NSF Grant No. DMR-2300639. P.M.S was supported in part by the U.S. DOE Grant No. DE-SC0020334.

Publication: Phys. Rev. B 109, 155426 (2024)

Presenters

  • Wencan Jin

    • Auburn University

Authors

  • Wencan Jin

    • Auburn University
  • Hussam Mustafa

    • Auburn University
  • Gaihua Ye

    • Texas Tech University
  • Cynthia Chiamaka Nnokwe

    • Texas Tech University
  • Mengqi Fang

    • Stevens Institute of Technology
  • Swati Chaudhary

    • University of Texas at Austin
    • Institute for Solid State Physics, The University of Tokyo
  • Jia-An Yan

    • Towson Univ
  • Ka-Ming Law

    • Auburn University
  • Julang Wang

    • Friends Academy
  • Andrew J Stollenwerk

    • University of northern Iowa
    • University of Northern Iowa
  • Paul Michael Shand

    • University of Northern Iowa
  • Eui-Hyeok Yang

    • Stevens Institute of Technology
  • Gregory A Fiete

    • Northeastern University
  • Rui He

    • Texas Tech University