Resonant torsion magnetometry in anisotropic quantum materials
K. A. Modic, Maja D. Bachmann, B. J. Ramshaw, F. Arnold, K. R. Shirer,, Amelia Estry, J. B. Betts, Nirmal J. Ghimire, E. D. Bauer, Marcus Schmidt,, Michael Baenitz, E. Svanidze, Ross D. McDonald, Arkady Shekhter, Philip J. W., Moll

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel, sensitive method using resonant torsion magnetometry to measure the magnetotropic coefficient in anisotropic quantum materials, providing new insights into their thermodynamic properties and phase transitions.
Contribution
The paper presents a simple experimental technique to directly measure the magnetotropic coefficient using cantilever frequency shifts, enhancing the study of anisotropic quantum materials.
Findings
Quantitative measurement of the magnetotropic coefficient $k$ from frequency shifts.
Application of the method to NbP and RuCl$_3$ demonstrating broad applicability.
Identification of discontinuities in $k$ at second-order phase transitions.
Abstract
Unusual behavior of quantum materials commonly arises from their effective low-dimensional physics, which reflects the underlying anisotropy in the spin and charge degrees of freedom. Torque magnetometry is a highly sensitive technique to directly quantify the anisotropy in quantum materials, such as the layered high-T superconductors, anisotropic quantum spin-liquids, and the surface states of topological insulators. Here we introduce the magnetotropic coefficient , the second derivative of the free energy F with respect to the angle between the sample and the applied magnetic field, and report a simple and effective method to experimentally detect it. A sub-g crystallite is placed at the tip of a commercially available atomic force microscopy cantilever, and we show that can be quantitatively inferred from a shift in the resonant…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
