Momentum-Alternating Spin Splitting (MASS)
- Momentum-Alternating Spin Splitting (MASS) is a nonrelativistic mechanism in antiferromagnets characterized by alternating exchange fields and crystallographic quadrupole invariants.
- It produces robust, momentum-dependent band splitting in centrosymmetric compounds, even without net magnetization or atomic spin-orbit coupling.
- MASS supports advanced spintronic and quantum transport applications, as shown by DFT studies and high-throughput design of altermagnetic materials.
Momentum-Alternating Spin Splitting (MASS) is a symmetry-protected, nonrelativistic spin-splitting mechanism whereby electronic bands in collinear antiferromagnets (specifically, "altermagnets") acquire a pronounced momentum-dependent spin polarization despite a vanishing net magnetization and the absence of atomic spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Unlike Rashba or Dresselhaus SOC-driven effects, MASS arises purely from magnetic exchange and crystallographic multipole symmetry, often in centrosymmetric, light-element compounds. The splitting alternates in sign across the Brillouin zone according to the crystal's allowed quadrupole invariants and is typically even in k, leading to robust, large, and tunable band spin splitting patterns beneficial for spintronics and quantum transport.
1. Theoretical Framework and Microscopic Mechanism
The canonical MASS Hamiltonian for a two-band model in collinear antiferromagnets is formally expressed as:
where is a materials-dependent coefficient and represents spin quantization along the staggered moment axis (Yuan et al., 2019). The collinear order is realized on two sublattices (Mn, Mn), with broken time-reversal symmetry and no combined inversion–time-reversal (𝕀Θ). The essential ingredients for MASS are:
- Alternating, localized exchange fields on magnetic sublattices, which energetically favor opposite spin states.
- Anisotropic hopping amplitudes, often engineered by subtle, symmetry-lowering distortions of nonmagnetic ligand cages or crystalline quadrupole potentials (Lee et al., 1 Dec 2025, Yuan et al., 2021).
Upon block-diagonalization, the band splitting is determined by:
This sign-alternates between Brillouin zone quadrants, vanishing along high-symmetry nodal lines (e.g. ), and maximizes in regions such as .
A unified relativistic framework has been established where the Dirac equation yields a higher-order magnetoelectric correction:
with the difference in electric quadrupole tensor between symmetry-inequivalent motifs. This shows that MASS is fundamentally quadrupolar, distinguishing it from k-linear (dipole) or k-independent (monopole) splitting mechanisms (Acosta, 28 May 2025).
2. Symmetry Criteria and Classification
MASS requires specific magnetic space-group symmetries:
- Type I or III MSG, i.e., absence of both inversion–time reversal (𝒫𝒯) and spin-rotation–translation (Uτ) symmetries, which would otherwise enforce double degeneracy at each k (Yuan et al., 2020, Guo et al., 2022, Sufyan et al., 18 Sep 2025).
- Magnetic point groups featuring none of the anti-unitary elements that simultaneously invert k and spin: e.g., $4'/mmm', m'm2', 6'/m'mm'$, etc.
A comprehensive symmetry taxonomy divides spin-splitting types by allowed multipole invariants:
| Origin | Site Point Group | Connectivity | k-Dependence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quadrupole | , , | such that | |
| Dipole | , | inverts/cants | |
| Monopole | Any () | relates |
In practice, MASS appears robustly in magnetic motifs where local quadrupoles have nonzero difference under non-commuting symmetries, e.g., rotation by 90°, mirror reflection, etc. (Acosta, 28 May 2025).
3. Minimal Hamiltonians, Spin-Polarization, and Band Structure Signatures
The MASS splitting can be encoded in a generic two-band effective Hamiltonian:
where is constrained by symmetry to belong to an irreducible representation of the crystal point group, typically taking even-polynomial forms:
- (d-wave, winding)
- (g-wave, )
- , , etc. (Hayami et al., 2019, Šmejkal et al., 2021)
Spin expectation values are governed by
ensuring momentum-alternating polarization patterns, with spin quantization locked to the AFM axis. Nodal lines and points of vanishing splitting correspond to symmetry-enforced boundaries (mirror planes, zone centers, etc.).
Band structure calculations across multiple compounds confirm nearly flat, large (>0.1–1 eV) splittings in materials like RuO, CrSb, MnF, and FeSOF (Guo et al., 2022, Yuan et al., 2019, Sufyan et al., 18 Sep 2025).
4. Materials Realizations and Quantitative Results
Automated high-throughput and targeted "inverse design" DFT approaches have proliferated the catalog of altermagnetic MASS compounds:
- Over 170 confirmed altermagnets with maximal splitting meV within eV of , including both metals (RuO, CrSb, MnNbP) and insulators (YRuO, MnTe) (Sufyan et al., 18 Sep 2025).
- Isolated bands display quadratic power-law dependence of splitting on momentum: e.g.,
for MnF along (Yuan et al., 2019).
Key representative splittings:
| Material | Max ΔE (eV) | Avg ΔE (eV) | Application Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| CrSb | 1.87 | 0.76 | High-spin metallic channels |
| MnNbP | 0.46 | 0.28 | Metal, hexagonal symmetry |
| YRuO | 0.12 | 0.08 | Insulator, large band gap |
| FeSOF | 0.26 | 0.18 | Nearly isotropic splitting |
| MnF | 0.3 | — | Quadratic splitting, confirmed in DFT |
The magnitude and topology of MASS splitting are maximized by compounds with large atomic exchange fields and strong anisotropic ligand-induced hybridization—emphasizing the crucial role of non-magnetic ions and crystallographic distortion (Yuan et al., 2021, Lee et al., 1 Dec 2025).
5. Comparison to Conventional SOC-Induced Spin Splitting
MASS differs from SOC-driven Rashba/Dresselhaus mechanisms in four fundamental respects:
- Symmetry: MASS manifests in fully centrosymmetric crystals, not requiring global inversion breaking.
- Mechanism: Purely magnetic exchange and multipole symmetry, not reliant on atomic SOC or heavy elements.
- k-Dependence: Even powers of k; splitting persists at time-reversal-invariant momenta, e.g. zone boundary points. SOC-driven effects are odd-in-k and vanish at all TRIMs.
- Magnitude: Typical MASS splitting reaches hundreds of meV to ~1 eV, often surpassing SOC-driven analogs in semiconductors (e.g., Rashba in GaAs: 1–10 meV, BiTeI: ~0.4 eV only with strong SOC) (Yuan et al., 2019, Šmejkal et al., 2021, Yuan et al., 2020).
6. Experimental Signatures and Applications
MASS is accessible to direct experimental verification via momentum-resolved probes:
- Spin-resolved ARPES: Reveals momentum-dependent spin polarization, notably off high-symmetry lines; signatures include antisymmetric lobes and spin inversion under crystallographic rotations (Sufyan et al., 18 Sep 2025).
- Anomalous Hall effect on proximate TI surfaces: The altermagnet's k-space-dependent mass term imprints half-quantized Hall conductance features, mapping the global spin texture (Chen et al., 24 Jan 2025).
- Spin transport: MASS enables spin current generation with symmetry-selective activation by electric fields or temperature gradients; device concepts exploit momentum filtering and ultra-long spin lifetimes due to strict collinearity (Hayami et al., 2019).
Applications include low-dissipation spin -transfer-torque devices in insulating AFMs, momentum-resolved spin valves, quantum Hall charge-spin converters, and topological band engineering without heavy elements or large net magnetization (Šmejkal et al., 2021, Guo et al., 2022, Yuan et al., 2020).
7. Materials Design Principles and Future Research Directions
Designing new MASS systems involves systematic identification of:
- Crystal structures with nonzero quadrupole difference between magnetic motifs.
- Maximizing exchange field and ligand-induced anisotropy (octahedral distortion, squared nets, rutile-type slabs, etc.).
- DFT+Bader multipole analysis to extract quadrupole tensors, unity-invariant k-polynomial forms, and to estimate splitting magnitude (Acosta, 28 May 2025, Lee et al., 1 Dec 2025).
Continued development will focus on:
- High-throughput screening for high-, low-Z candidates.
- Experimental mapping of momentum-resolved spin textures by advanced ARPES protocols.
- Theoretical exploration of interplay between MASS, topology (Weyl points, nodal lines), and correlated electron phenomena in compensated magnets.
In sum, MASS establishes a symmetry-governed, robust paradigm for alternative spin splitting in antiferromagnets, empowering quantum spintronic applications in light-element, high-coherence magnetic platforms.