pith. sign in

arxiv: 2605.23205 · v1 · pith:MUH43TM7new · submitted 2026-05-22 · ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci · cond-mat.str-el· physics.app-ph

Pulsed thermal annealing enables switching of chiral antiferromagnetic order with a sub-millitesla field in Mn₃Sn

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 04:22 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.str-elphysics.app-ph
keywords Mn3Snantiferromagnetic switchinganomalous Hall effectNéel temperaturethermal annealingmagnetic octupolechiral antiferromagnetspintronics
0
0 comments X

The pith

Pulsed thermal annealing above the Néel temperature combined with a 0.1 mT field fully switches the chiral antiferromagnetic order in Mn₃Sn.

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

The paper shows that heating Mn₃Sn crystals above the Néel temperature TN and then cooling them while a magnetic field as small as 0.1 mT is applied produces complete, repeatable reorientation of the magnetic octupole order. Anomalous Hall effect data establish that the field strength required for switching falls steadily as temperature rises toward TN and reaches zero exactly at TN. The central mechanism is thermal softening: the brief excursion above TN eliminates the anisotropy energy barrier that normally pins the order, so the weak field alone selects the final state on cooling. A simple model for estimating local temperature rise under current pulses is included to connect the result to device-scale operation.

Core claim

Pulsed thermal annealing above TN followed by cooling in a tiny external field enables full and reproducible switching of the magnetic octupole order. Systematic measurements of the anomalous Hall effect show that the switching field decreases as temperature approaches TN and vanishes at TN. Thermal softening removes the anisotropy barrier, allowing an extremely weak directional field to set the final magnetic state during cooling.

What carries the argument

Pulsed thermal annealing above TN to temporarily eliminate the magnetic anisotropy barrier, followed by cooling in a weak applied field that selects the octupole orientation.

If this is right

  • Switching of the octupole order occurs with external fields down to 0.1 mT once the thermal pulse is applied.
  • The required switching field drops continuously to zero at TN.
  • A model estimates the temperature increase inside nanoscale devices driven by current pulses.
  • Thermal softening acts as an essential partner to spin-orbit torques rather than a parasitic effect.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • In thin-film geometries an effective field generated by spin-orbit torque could replace the external 0.1 mT field, enabling fully electrical control.
  • The same thermal-pulse protocol may work in other non-collinear antiferromagnets whose anisotropy vanishes near their ordering temperature.
  • Device layouts could deliberately combine Joule heating and torque direction in a single current pulse to achieve deterministic switching without external magnets.

Load-bearing premise

The brief heating above TN removes the anisotropy barrier cleanly without defects or thermal gradients that would set the octupole orientation independently of the applied field.

What would settle it

Cooling through TN after the heat pulse in a 0.1 mT field yields inconsistent final Hall signals across repeated trials, or zero-field cooling after the pulse produces the same final state as field cooling.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.23205 by Jing Zhang, Xiaodong Guo, Xiaokang Li, Zengwei Zhu.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Setup, chiral antiferromagnetic order and threshold field. (a) Schematic of the pulsed thermal annealing setup. (b) Field dependence of Hall resistivity at 250 K showing the AHE hysteresis, with the two Hall plateaus representing the positive and negative chiral antiferromagnetic states, respectively. (c) Temperature dependence of the threshold field B0 (the minimum magnetic field required to switch the oc… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Pulsed thermal annealing switching. (a,b) Time evolution of the chiral antiferromagnetic order during heating to 438 K and cooling in (a) +0.4 mT and (b) –0.4 mT. Before each heating pulse, the sample was first magnetized in the opposite direction (e.g., –200 mT for the +0.4 mT cooling run, and +200 mT for the –0.4 mT cooling run), and the field was then slowly ramped to the target cooling field to ensure … view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Crossing TN is necessary. (a) Annealing at 438 K (above TN) with a 0.2 mT cooling field: the chiral antiferromagnetic order switches sign. (b) Annealing at 409 K (below TN) with a 0.2 mT cooling field: the chiral antiferromagnetic order does not switch sign. Instead, its original orientation is partially attenuated (as evidenced by a reduced AHE signal) but not reversed. Discussion Our experiments establis… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

The manipulation of antiferromagnetic (AFM) order is a central theme in modern spintronics. In this work, we achieve reliable switching of the chiral AFM state in the Weyl antiferromagnet Mn$_3$Sn using a heat pulse combined with a very small magnetic field as small as 0.1 mT. By systematically measuring the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in high-quality single crystals, we show that the field needed for switching decreases as the temperature approaches the N\'eel temperature $T_N$, and vanishes at $T_N$. Pulsed thermal annealing above $T_N$ followed by cooling in a tiny external field enables full and reproducible switching of the magnetic octupole order. Our results show that thermal softening (heating above $T_N$ to temporarily remove the magnetic anisotropy) is a key step that lowers the energy barrier to nearly zero. This allows an extremely weak directional field (like the effective field from spin-orbit torque in thin-film devices) to set the final magnetic state during cooling. We also provide a simple model to estimate the temperature rise in nanoscale devices under current pulses, giving practical guidance for device design. This work highlights that thermal effects are not a side issue but an important partner to spin torques, and suggests that future work should take both into account.

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

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports an experimental demonstration in high-quality Mn₃Sn single crystals that pulsed thermal annealing above the Néel temperature T_N followed by cooling in an external field as small as 0.1 mT enables full and reproducible switching of the chiral antiferromagnetic octupole order. Systematic AHE measurements show that the switching field decreases toward zero as temperature approaches T_N and vanishes at T_N. The authors attribute the effect to thermal softening that removes the anisotropy barrier and supply a simple model for estimating local temperature rise under current pulses in nanoscale devices.

Significance. If the central experimental observations hold, the result would be significant for antiferromagnetic spintronics by showing that thermal annealing can reduce the energy barrier to near zero, allowing sub-millitesla fields (potentially from spin-orbit torques) to deterministically set the octupole orientation on cooling. Explicit credit is due for the use of high-quality single crystals with AHE readout and for providing a practical heating model that offers device-design guidance.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: the statement that the field 'vanishes at T_N' would benefit from a brief note on how this limit was established experimentally (e.g., extrapolation or direct measurement at T_N).
  2. [Abstract] The description of the local-heating model would be clearer if the key parameters (pulse duration, thermal conductivity, device geometry) were listed explicitly even in summary form.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive summary, significance assessment, and recommendation of minor revision. No specific major comments appear in the provided report.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: purely experimental claims with no derivation or self-referential fitting

full rationale

The manuscript reports experimental observations of AHE-based switching in Mn3Sn single crystals under pulsed thermal annealing plus sub-mT fields. The key statements (field required for switching vanishes at TN; pulsed annealing above TN enables reproducible octupole reorientation) are direct measurements, not derived quantities. No equations, parameter fits, uniqueness theorems, or self-citations are invoked as load-bearing steps in any derivation chain. The brief mention of a simple model for local heating is presented as practical guidance rather than a predictive derivation that reduces to its own inputs. The work is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks with no detectable circularity.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Experimental materials-science paper; no free parameters, mathematical axioms, or new postulated entities appear in the abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5788 in / 1108 out tokens · 23363 ms · 2026-05-25T04:22:30.100768+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

23 extracted references · 23 canonical work pages

  1. [1]

    N.et al.Giant magnetoresistance of (001) fe/(001) cr magnetic superlattices.Phys

    Baibich, M. N.et al.Giant magnetoresistance of (001) fe/(001) cr magnetic superlattices.Phys. Rev. Lett.61, 2472 (1988). 2.Slonczewski, J. C. Current-driven excitation of magnetic multilayers.J. Magn. Magn. Mater.159, L1–L7 (1996)

  2. [2]

    & Wunderlich, J

    Jungwirth, T., Marti, X., Wadley, P. & Wunderlich, J. Antiferromagnetic spintronics.Nat. Nanotechnol.11, 231–241 (2016)

  3. [3]

    Baltz, V .et al.Antiferromagnetic spintronics.Rev. Mod. Phys.90, 015005, DOI: 10.1103/RevModPhys.90.015005 (2018). 5.Jungwirth, T.et al.The multiple directions of antiferromagnetic spintronics.Nat. Phys.14, 200–203 (2018)

  4. [4]

    & MacDonald, A

    Šmejkal, L., Mokrousov, Y ., Yan, B. & MacDonald, A. H. Topological antiferromagnetic spintronics.Nat. Phys.14, 242–251 (2018)

  5. [5]

    & MacDonald, A

    Chen, H., Niu, Q. & MacDonald, A. H. Anomalous Hall effect arising from noncollinear antiferromagnetism.Phys. Rev. Lett.112, 017205, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.017205 (2014)

  6. [6]

    & Felser, C

    Kübler, J. & Felser, C. Non-collinear antiferromagnets and the anomalous Hall effect.EPL (Europhysics Lett.108, 67001, DOI: 10.1209/0295-5075/108/67001 (2014)

  7. [7]

    & Higo, T

    Nakatsuji, S., Kiyohara, N. & Higo, T. Large anomalous Hall effect in a non-collinear antiferromagnet at room temperature. Nature527, 212, DOI: 10.1038/nature15723 (2015)

  8. [8]

    & Arita, R

    Suzuki, M.-T., Koretsune, T., Ochi, M. & Arita, R. Cluster multipole theory for anomalous Hall effect in antiferromagnets. Phys. Rev. B95, 094406, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.95.094406 (2017)

  9. [9]

    Phys.13, 1085–1090, DOI: 10.1038/nphys4181 (2017)

    Ikhlas, M.et al.Large anomalous Nernst effect at room temperature in a chiral antiferromagnet.Nat. Phys.13, 1085–1090, DOI: 10.1038/nphys4181 (2017)

  10. [10]

    Li, X.et al.Anomalous Nernst and Righi-Leduc effects in Mn 3Sn: Berry curvature and entropy flow.Phys. Rev. Lett.119, 056601, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.056601 (2017)

  11. [11]

    Adv.6, eaaz3522, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aaz3522 (2020)

    Xu, L.et al.Finite-temperature violation of the anomalous transverse Wiedemann-Franz law.Sci. Adv.6, eaaz3522, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aaz3522 (2020)

  12. [12]

    Higo, T.et al.Large magneto-optical Kerr effect and imaging of magnetic octupole domains in an antiferromagnetic metal. Nat. Photonics12, 73–78 (2018)

  13. [13]

    L.et al.Comparing the anomalous Hall effect and the magneto-optical Kerr effect through antiferromagnetic phase transitions in Mn3Sn.Appl

    Balk, A. L.et al.Comparing the anomalous Hall effect and the magneto-optical Kerr effect through antiferromagnetic phase transitions in Mn3Sn.Appl. Phys. Lett.114, 032401, DOI: 10.1063/1.5066557 (2019)

  14. [14]

    Heavy operators and hydrodynamic tails

    Li, X.et al.Momentum-space and real-space Berry curvatures in Mn 3Sn.SciPost Phys.5, 063, DOI: 10.21468/SciPostPhys. 5.6.063 (2018)

  15. [15]

    K., Madduri, P

    Rout, P. K., Madduri, P. V . P., Manna, S. K. & Nayak, A. K. Field-induced topological Hall effect in the noncoplanar triangular antiferromagnetic geometry of Mn3Sn.Phys. Rev. B99, 094430, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.99.094430 (2019)

  16. [16]

    Commun.10, 3021, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10815-8 (2019)

    Li, X.et al.Chiral domain walls of Mn 3Sn and their memory.Nat. Commun.10, 3021, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10815-8 (2019)

  17. [17]

    & Zhu, Z

    Xu, L., Li, X., Ding, L., Behnia, K. & Zhu, Z. Planar Hall effect caused by the memory of antiferromagnetic domain walls in Mn3Ge.Appl. Phys. Lett.117, 222403, DOI: 10.1063/5.0030546 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0030546

  18. [18]

    Tsai, H.et al.Electrical manipulation of a topological antiferromagnetic state.Nature580, 608–613, DOI: 10.1038/ s41586-020-2211-2 (2020)

  19. [19]

    Mater.20, 1364–1370 (2021)

    Takeuchi, Y .et al.Chiral-spin rotation of non-collinear antiferromagnet by spin–orbit torque.Nat. Mater.20, 1364–1370 (2021). 22.Higo, T.et al.Perpendicular full switching of chiral antiferromagnetic order by current.Nature607, 474–479 (2022). 6/7

  20. [20]

    Mater.22, 1106–1113 (2023)

    Yoon, J.-Y .et al.Handedness anomaly in a non-collinear antiferromagnet under spin–orbit torque.Nat. Mater.22, 1106–1113 (2023)

  21. [21]

    Chen, X. & et al. Octupole-driven magnetoresistance in an antiferromagnetic tunnel junction.Nature613, 490–495 (2023). 25.Takeuchi, Y .et al.Electrical coherent driving of chiral antiferromagnet.Science389, 830–834 (2025)

  22. [22]

    Mater.25, 434–439 (2026)

    Ogawa, K.et al.Ultrafast time-resolved observation of non-thermal current-induced switching in an antiferromagnetic weyl semimetal.Nat. Mater.25, 434–439 (2026). 27.Zhou, Z.et al.Field-free full switching of chiral antiferromagnetic order.Nature651, 341–347 (2026)

  23. [23]

    K.et al.Time-dependent multistate switching of topological antiferromagnetic order in Mn 3Sn.Phys

    Krishnaswamy, G. K.et al.Time-dependent multistate switching of topological antiferromagnetic order in Mn 3Sn.Phys. Rev. Appl.18, 024064, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.18.024064 (2022). 7/7