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arxiv: 2604.14845 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-16 · ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Propagation of laser-generated GHz surface acoustic wavepackets in FeRh/MgO(001) below and above the antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic phase transition

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 10:58 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords FeRhsurface acoustic wavesphase transitionlaser excitationdispersionelastic propertiesmagnetoacousticsoptoacoustic transducer
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The pith

The magnetic phase transition in FeRh films produces abrupt shifts in elastic properties that tune laser-generated surface acoustic wave amplitude and dispersion.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that crossing the antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic transition in a thin FeRh film on MgO, which occurs slightly above room temperature, creates sudden changes in the film's elastic behavior. These changes alter both the efficiency with which femtosecond laser pulses excite gigahertz surface acoustic waves and the way those waves disperse as they propagate across the surface. The authors track amplitude, spectral content, phase and group velocities, and their directional dependence using time-resolved interferometry while varying temperature and laser energy. A sympathetic reader would care because the approach offers a simple temperature-based handle on wave properties in a system intended for magnetoacoustic coupling without needing patterned transducers.

Core claim

In the Fe49Rh51/MgO(001) system the antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic phase transition in the FeRh film is accompanied by abrupt changes in elastic properties that enable controlled modification of the excitation efficiency and dispersion characteristics of laser-generated GHz surface acoustic wavepackets by tuning sample temperature and laser fluence. Using 160 fs laser pulses for excitation and time-resolved Sagnac interferometry for detection, the study evaluates SAW amplitude, spectral content, phase and group velocities, and their in-plane anisotropy, with the dispersion relation determined primarily by the FeRh film.

What carries the argument

The FeRh thin film, which functions simultaneously as an opto-acoustic transducer and a mechanical load whose elastic properties change abruptly at the magnetic phase transition.

If this is right

  • SAW amplitude and frequency content can be switched by temperature control across the transition.
  • Phase and group velocities change with the transition, directly affecting wave travel times and dispersion.
  • In-plane anisotropy of the dispersion relation follows the film's elastic symmetry and can be reconfigured by the same temperature step.
  • The coherent phonon-magnon interaction strength can be adjusted through the same elastic changes.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Temperature could serve as a switch to turn coherent acoustic-magnon coupling on or off in integrated devices.
  • The same principle might apply to other materials that undergo first-order elastic transitions near room temperature.
  • Time-resolved studies could map how the dispersion change affects magnon generation thresholds when the film is driven into resonance.

Load-bearing premise

The modulations in SAW amplitude, spectrum, and velocity arise primarily from the abrupt elastic-property jumps in the FeRh film at the phase transition rather than from gradual heating, thermal expansion, or interface effects.

What would settle it

Independent measurement of the FeRh film's elastic moduli as a function of temperature across the transition point, followed by comparison of the size and location of any discontinuities with the observed jumps in SAW velocity and amplitude.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.14845 by (2) P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute of the RAS, (3) Institute of Metal Physics of the Ural Branch of the RAS, (4) Lomonosov Moscow State University, A. I. Sharkov (2), A. M. Kalashnikova (1) ((1) Ioffe Institute, A. V. Protasov (3), A. Yu. Klokov (2), D. I. Devyaterikov (3), Ekaterinburg, G. E. Zhezlyaev (3), Ia. A. Mogunov (1), Moscow, N. Yu. Frolov (2), Russia, Russia), St. Petersburg, V. I. Zverev (4).

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Characterization of the epitaxial Fe49Rh51 thin film. (a) Schematic illustration of the sample geometry, depicting the pump and probe pulses and the generated SAW pulse; (b) Thermal magnetization hysteresis loop under an in-plane magnetic field µ0H=100 mT. Vertical dashed lines mark the used temperatures; (c) X-ray diffraction θ − 2θ and (d) ϕ scans acquired at room temperature. experimental configuration,… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Optical schematic of the Sagnac-type interferometric setup. Key components include half-wave (λ/2) and quarter-wave (λ/4) plates; BBO, a beta-barium borate crystal for frequency doubling; and PD1 and PD2, the inputs to two photodetectors. A 4f-scheme is employed for spatial scanning of the probe and reference beams relative to the pump. The inset shows time delays involved in experiments. A schematic of th… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Experimental 1D scans. (a) Time-resolved transient reflectivity change ∆R(t)/R measured at T0=305 K for various pump fluences W (indicated in the figure) with subtracted thermal background. Inset: fluence dependence of the amplitude of the phase-transition-related reflectivity change ∆RP T /R at the same temperature, with the threshold fluence WT and saturation fluence WS marked; (b) Phase shift φ as a fun… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Two-dimensional spatial maps of the measured phase shift φ(x, y). Data are presented for initial temperatures T0=305 K (a, b), T0=330 K (c, d), and T0=430 K (e, f), recorded at time delays t=3 ns (a, c, e) and t=13 ns (b, d, f). Note the different spatial scale for t=3 and 13 ns. A common color scale applies to all panels. is also examined. 4 Discussion 4.1 Amplitudes and wavenumbers We first investigated … view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Spectral analysis of the detected SAW pulses. (a) Normalized FFT spectra of the spatial scans φ(x) acquired at T0=305 K and t=3 ns for a set of pumnp fluences W; (b, c) Pump fluence dependence of the central wavenumber kx and the corresponding phonon frequency for the indicated initial temperatures T0, shown for propagation times t=3 ns (b) and t=29 ns (c). Error bars denote the FWHM of the spectral distri… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Group and phase velocities of SAWs. (a) Temperature dependence of the phase velocity vp and group velocity vg along the MgO[100] direction. The inset illustrates the method used to determine vp and vg from the experimental waveforms; (b-c) Azimuthal angle dependence of the phase velocity (b) and group velocity (c), extracted from the two-dimensional spatial maps shown in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_… view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Dispersion of SAWs in the FeRh/MgO(001) system. (a) Phase velocity dispersion vp(k) extracted from the two-dimensional spatial maps shown in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p009_7.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Magnetoacoustic devices that harness the strong coupling between acoustic waves and magnons have emerged as a promising platform for energy-efficient spintronics. Laser-generated pulsed surface acoustic waves (SAWs) are particularly attractive for such applications, offering broadband frequency content up to the gigahertz (GHz) range, remote excitation without lithographic patterning, and surface localization for efficient on-chip integration. In this work, we present a comprehensive experimental study of laser-generated SAW pulses in the Fe49Rh51/MgO(001) system. A thin film of the near-equiatomic FeRh alloy serves both as an opto-acoustic transducer and as a mechanical load that modulates SAW propagation. The antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic phase transition in FeRh, occurring slightly above room temperature, is accompanied by abrupt changes in its elastic properties, enabling controlled modification of the SAW excitation efficiency and dispersion characteristics by tuning the sample temperature and laser fluence. Using 160 fs laser pulses for excitation and time-resolved Sagnac interferometry for detection, we evaluated key SAW parameters, including amplitude, spectral content, phase and group velocities, and their in-plane anisotropy. Particular emphasis is placed on the dispersion relation and its anisotropy, which govern the coherent interaction between phonons and magnons and are determined primarily by the FeRh film.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports an experimental study of laser-generated GHz surface acoustic wavepackets in Fe49Rh51/MgO(001) thin films. It claims that the antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic phase transition slightly above room temperature produces abrupt changes in the film's elastic properties, which in turn allow controlled modification of SAW excitation efficiency, amplitude, spectral content, phase/group velocities, dispersion, and anisotropy through adjustments in sample temperature and laser fluence. The work uses 160 fs laser pulses for excitation and time-resolved Sagnac interferometry for detection, with the FeRh film acting as both opto-acoustic transducer and mechanical load.

Significance. If the central attribution holds, the results would be significant for magnetoacoustic spintronics by showing a practical route to temperature- or fluence-tunable SAW devices that exploit the strong phonon-magnon coupling near the FeRh transition. The broadband, remote-excitation approach without lithographic patterning is a clear strength, and the standard methods (femtosecond excitation plus Sagnac detection) are appropriate. The work also supplies direct measurements of dispersion anisotropy, which is relevant for coherent phonon-magnon interactions.

major comments (2)
  1. Abstract: the central claim that abrupt elastic-property changes at the ~350 K transition enable controlled modification of SAW parameters is load-bearing, yet the abstract supplies no quantitative values, error bars, or exclusion criteria for the observed modulations in amplitude, spectrum, or velocities.
  2. Experimental description and results: the attribution of observed shifts in SAW amplitude, spectral content, phase/group velocity, and anisotropy to discontinuous jumps in the FeRh elastic moduli (C11, C44, etc.) is not supported by independent elastic-tensor measurements (e.g., Brillouin scattering or picosecond ultrasonics on the same samples) or by quantitative modeling that isolates modulus changes from concurrent effects such as the ~1% volume expansion altering film-substrate strain, temperature-dependent laser absorption modifying the opto-acoustic source depth, or possible magnon-phonon feedback. Without these controls the data remain equally consistent with a smooth thermal response plus step-like strain release.
minor comments (2)
  1. Abstract: the description of the 'comprehensive experimental study' does not include the temperature range, fluence values, film thickness, or any numerical magnitudes of the reported changes.
  2. The manuscript would benefit from explicit statements of the number of samples measured, repeatability, and how the phase-transition temperature was independently verified on the studied films.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed report, which highlights both the potential significance of the work for magnetoacoustic spintronics and areas where the manuscript can be strengthened. We address each major comment point by point below and outline the revisions we will make.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Abstract: the central claim that abrupt elastic-property changes at the ~350 K transition enable controlled modification of SAW parameters is load-bearing, yet the abstract supplies no quantitative values, error bars, or exclusion criteria for the observed modulations in amplitude, spectrum, or velocities.

    Authors: We agree that the abstract would benefit from quantitative support for the central claim. In the revised manuscript we will incorporate specific values for the observed changes, including the relative amplitude modulation (with uncertainty), the shift in dominant frequency content, and the changes in phase and group velocities (with error bars derived from multiple measurements), together with the temperature window of the transition. This will make the load-bearing attribution more explicit while remaining within the abstract length constraints. revision: yes

  2. Referee: Experimental description and results: the attribution of observed shifts in SAW amplitude, spectral content, phase/group velocity, and anisotropy to discontinuous jumps in the FeRh elastic moduli (C11, C44, etc.) is not supported by independent elastic-tensor measurements (e.g., Brillouin scattering or picosecond ultrasonics on the same samples) or by quantitative modeling that isolates modulus changes from concurrent effects such as the ~1% volume expansion altering film-substrate strain, temperature-dependent laser absorption modifying the opto-acoustic source depth, or possible magnon-phonon feedback. Without these controls the data remain equally consistent with a smooth thermal response plus step-like strain release.

    Authors: We acknowledge that independent elastic-tensor measurements on the identical samples would provide the strongest possible support. Such measurements were outside the scope of the present study. However, the abrupt changes in all reported SAW parameters coincide precisely with the well-established first-order antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic transition temperature of Fe49Rh51 (~350 K), which is accompanied by known elastic softening according to the literature. In the revision we will add a dedicated discussion subsection that (i) estimates the magnitude of confounding contributions from the ~1 % volume expansion, temperature-dependent optical absorption, and possible magnon-phonon feedback using available material parameters, (ii) shows that these effects are either continuous or too small to reproduce the observed step-like behavior, and (iii) presents a quantitative comparison of the measured dispersion and anisotropy with calculations that employ literature elastic constants for the AF and FM phases. We believe this additional analysis will demonstrate that the elastic-modulus discontinuity is the dominant mechanism while remaining fully consistent with the existing data set. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: purely experimental observations with no derivations or self-referential predictions

full rationale

The paper is an experimental report on laser-generated SAW propagation in FeRh/MgO, measuring amplitude, spectra, velocities, and anisotropy as functions of temperature and fluence across the AF-FM transition. No equations, models, fitted parameters, or predictions are presented that could reduce to inputs by construction. Background statements about elastic property changes at the transition are cited as known material behavior rather than derived here. All central claims rest on direct time-resolved interferometry data, satisfying the self-contained criterion with no load-bearing self-citations or ansatzes.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

This is a purely experimental characterization paper. No mathematical derivations, free parameters, or new physical entities are introduced; the work rests on standard assumptions of linear acoustics in thin films and the known first-order phase transition in near-equiatomic FeRh.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Surface acoustic wave propagation in a thin film on a substrate is governed by the elastic properties of the film and substrate with possible anisotropy
    Invoked when interpreting measured phase and group velocities and their anisotropy as determined primarily by the FeRh film.

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