News Release

Strong magnetic second harmonic generation effect discovered in two-dimensional CrPS4 monolayer

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Strong Magnetic Second Harmonic Generation Effect Discovered in Two-dimensional CrPS4 Monolayer

image: 

CrPS4 exhibits a monolayer ferromagnetic order induced second-harmonic generation effect. (The accompanying figures are optical images of monolayer CrPS4 and atomic force microscopy characterization.) 

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Credit: HOU De

Recently, with the help of the Steady High Magnetic Field Facility,  a research team led by Professor SHENG Zhigao at the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, for the first time observed the strong nonlinear magnetic second harmonic generation (MSHG) induced by the ferromagnetic order in monolayer CrPS4

The results have been published in Advanced Optical Materials.

Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) is a nonlinear optical effect sensitive to symmetry breaking in materials. While SHG was first seen in crystals with broken symmetry (i type), it also occurs in magnetic systems (c type), though much weaker. This limits its use in optical devices. Magnetic two-dimensional van der Waals materials, gaining attention for their unique properties, still have unexplored nonlinear optical properties, particularly the link between SHG and magnetic order, which limits their potential in optoelectronics.

In this study, the team delved deeply into the magnetic order-related SHG effects in the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic material CrPS4. They found that in bulk and even-layered CrPS4, the antiferromagnetic order did not produce any c type SHG effects, whereas a substantial c type SHG effect induced by monolayer ferromagnetic order was observed in odd-layered CrPS4. This is the first observation of ferromagnetic order induced c type SHG effects in a 2D magnet under the electric-dipole approximation, stemming from the dual breaking of spatial and time inversion symmetries. 

More importantly, the research team found that the ferromagnetic order induced c type SHG has a signal strength comparable to that of i type SHG, which arises from the breaking of crystal structural symmetry. This is extremely rare among all known magnetic materials, suggesting a new mechanism for the generation of MSHG. 

“Our discovery revealed a new mechanism for SHG in two-dimensional magnetic materials,” said HOU De, first author of the paper, “and greatly enriched the category of SHG generated by magnetic order.” 


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