The anomalous Hall effect has been indispensable in our understanding of numerous magnetic phenomena. This concerns both ferromagnetic materials, as well as diverse classes of antiferromagnets, where in addition to the anomalous and recently discovered crystal Hall effect, the topological Hall effect in noncoplanar antiferromagnets has been a subject of intensive research in the past decades. Here, we uncover a distinct flavor of the Hall effect emerging in generic canted spin systems. We demonstrate that upon canting, the anomalous Hall effect acquires a contribution which is sensitive to the sense of imprinted vector chirality among spins. We explore the origins and basic properties of corresponding chiral Hall effect, and closely tie it to the symmetry properties of the system. Our findings suggest that the chiral Hall effect and corresponding chiral magneto-optical effects emerge as useful tools in characterizing an interplay of structure and chirality in complex magnets, as well as in tracking their chiral dynamics and fluctuations.
The transport properties of non-trivial spin textures are coming under closer scrutiny as the amount of experimental data and theoretical simulations is increasing. To extend the commonly accepted yet simplifying and approximate picture of transport effects taking place in systems with spatially varying magnetization, it is important to understand the transport properties of building blocks for spin textures − the homochiral spin-spiral states. In this work, by referring to phenomenological symmetry arguments based on the gradient expansion, and explicit calculations within the Kubo framework, we study the transport properties of various types of spin-spirals in a two-dimensional model with strong spin-orbit interaction. In particular, we focus on the contributions to the magnetoconductivity, the planar Hall effect and the anomalous Hall effect, which are sensitive to the sense of chirality of the spiral states. We analyze the emergence, symmetry, and microscopic properties of the resulting chiral magnetoconductivity, chiral planar Hall effect, and chiral Hall effect in terms of spin-spiral propagation direction, cone angle, spiral pitch, and disorder strength. Our findings suggest that the presence of spin-spiral states in magnets can be readily detected in various types of magnetotransport setups. Moreover, the sizable magnitude of chiral contributions to the conductivity of skyrmions estimated from homochiral spirals implies that chiral, as opposed to topological, magnetotransport can play a prominent role for the detection of non-trivial spin textures.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.