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Dive into the research topics where Sándor Bordács is active.

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Featured researches published by Sándor Bordács.


Nature Materials | 2015

Néel-type skyrmion lattice with confined orientation in the polar magnetic semiconductor GaV4S8.

I. Kezsmarki; Sándor Bordács; Peter Milde; Erik Neuber; Lukas M. Eng; J. S. White; Henrik M. Rønnow; C. D. Dewhurst; Masahito Mochizuki; K. Yanai; Hiroyuki Nakamura; D. Ehlers; V. Tsurkan; A. Loidl

Following the early prediction of the skyrmion lattice (SkL)--a periodic array of spin vortices--it has been observed recently in various magnetic crystals mostly with chiral structure. Although non-chiral but polar crystals with Cnv symmetry were identified as ideal SkL hosts in pioneering theoretical studies, this archetype of SkL has remained experimentally unexplored. Here, we report the discovery of a SkL in the polar magnetic semiconductor GaV4S8 with rhombohedral (C3v) symmetry and easy axis anisotropy. The SkL exists over an unusually broad temperature range compared with other bulk crystals and the orientation of the vortices is not controlled by the external magnetic field, but instead confined to the magnetic easy axis. Supporting theory attributes these unique features to a new Néel-type of SkL describable as a superposition of spin cycloids in contrast to the Bloch-type SkL in chiral magnets described in terms of spin helices.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Malaria pigment crystals as magnetic micro-rotors: key for high-sensitivity diagnosis

Ádám Butykai; Ágnes Orbán; V. Kocsis; D. Szaller; Sándor Bordács; E. Tátrai-Szekeres; Levente Kiss; A. Bóta; Beáta G. Vértessy; T. Zelles; István Kézsmárki

The need to develop new methods for the high-sensitivity diagnosis of malaria has initiated a global activity in medical and interdisciplinary sciences. Most of the diverse variety of emerging techniques are based on research-grade instruments, sophisticated reagent-based assays or rely on expertise. Here, we suggest an alternative optical methodology with an easy-to-use and cost-effective instrumentation based on unique properties of malaria pigment reported previously and determined quantitatively in the present study. Malaria pigment, also called hemozoin, is an insoluble microcrystalline form of heme. These crystallites show remarkable magnetic and optical anisotropy distinctly from any other components of blood. As a consequence, they can simultaneously act as magnetically driven micro-rotors and spinning polarizers in suspensions. These properties can gain importance not only in malaria diagnosis and therapies, where hemozoin is considered as drug target or immune modulator, but also in the magnetic manipulation of cells and tissues on the microscopic scale.


Science Advances | 2015

Multiferroicity and skyrmions carrying electric polarization in GaV4S8

E. Ruff; S. Widmann; P. Lunkenheimer; V. Tsurkan; Sándor Bordács; István Kézsmárki; A. Loidl

A zoo of multiferroic phases shows up in the lacunar spinel GaV4S8, including skyrmions carrying ferroelectric polarization. Skyrmions are whirl-like topological spin objects with high potential for future magnetic data storage. A fundamental question that is relevant to both basic research and application is whether ferroelectric (FE) polarization can be associated with skyrmions’ magnetic texture and whether these objects can be manipulated by electric fields. We study the interplay between magnetism and electric polarization in the lacunar spinel GaV4S8, which undergoes a structural transition associated with orbital ordering at 44 K and reveals a complex magnetic phase diagram below 13 K, including ferromagnetic, cycloidal, and Néel-type skyrmion lattice (SkL) phases. We found that the orbitally ordered phase of GaV4S8 is FE with a sizable polarization of ~1 μC/cm2. Moreover, we observed spin-driven excess polarizations in all magnetic phases; hence, GaV4S8 hosts three different multiferroic phases with coexisting polar and magnetic order. These include the SkL phase, where we predict a strong spatial modulation of FE polarization close to the skyrmion cores. By taking into account the crystal symmetry and spin patterns of the magnetically ordered phases, we identify exchange striction as the main microscopic mechanism behind the spin-driven FE polarization in each multiferroic phase. Because GaV4S8 is unique among known SkL host materials owing to its polar crystal structure and the observed strong magnetoelectric effect, this study is an important step toward the nondissipative electric field control of skyrmions.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Optical Diode Effect at Spin-Wave Excitations of the Room-Temperature Multiferroic BiFeO_{3}.

I. Kézsmárki; Urmas Nagel; Sándor Bordács; Randy Scott Fishman; Jun Hee Lee; Hee Taek Yi; Sang-Wook Cheong; Toomas Room

Multiferroics permit the magnetic control of the electric polarization and the electric control of the magnetization. These static magnetoelectric (ME) effects are of enormous interest: The ability to read and write a magnetic state current-free by an electric voltage would provide a huge technological advantage. Dynamic or optical ME effects are equally interesting, because they give rise to unidirectional light propagation as recently observed in low-temperature multiferroics. This phenomenon, if realized at room temperature, would allow the development of optical diodes which transmit unpolarized light in one, but not in the opposite, direction. Here, we report strong unidirectional transmission in the room-temperature multiferroic BiFeO_{3} over the gigahertz-terahertz frequency range. The supporting theory attributes the observed unidirectional transmission to the spin-current-driven dynamic ME effect. These findings are an important step toward the realization of optical diodes, supplemented by the ability to switch the transmission direction with a magnetic or electric field.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Anomalous Hall Effect in the (In,Mn)Sb Dilute Magnetic Semiconductor

G. Mihály; Miklós Csontos; Sándor Bordács; I. Kézsmárki; T. Wojtowicz; X. Liu; Bolizsar Janko; J. K. Furdyna

High magnetic field study of Hall resistivity in the ferromagnetic phase of (In,Mn)Sb allows one to separate its normal and anomalous components. We show that the anomalous Hall term is not proportional to the magnetization, and that it even changes sign as a function of magnetic field. We also show that the application of pressure modifies the scattering process, but does not influence the Hall effect. These observations suggest that the anomalous Hall effect in (In,Mn)Sb is an intrinsic property and supports the application of the Berry phase theory for (III,Mn)V semiconductors. We propose a phenomenological description of the anomalous Hall conductivity, based on a field-dependent relative shift of the heavy- and light-hole valence bands and the split-off band.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Equilibrium skyrmion lattice ground state in a polar easy-plane magnet

Sándor Bordács; Ádám Butykai; B. G. Szigeti; J. S. White; R. Cubitt; Andrey O. Leonov; S. Widmann; D. Ehlers; H.-A. Krug von Nidda; V. Tsurkan; A. Loidl; István Kézsmárki

The skyrmion lattice state (SkL), a crystal built of mesoscopic spin vortices, gains its stability via thermal fluctuations in all bulk skyrmion host materials known to date. Therefore, its existence is limited to a narrow temperature region below the paramagnetic state. This stability range can drastically increase in systems with restricted geometries, such as thin films, interfaces and nanowires. Thermal quenching can also promote the SkL as a metastable state over extended temperature ranges. Here, we demonstrate more generally that a proper choice of material parameters alone guarantees the thermodynamic stability of the SkL over the full temperature range below the paramagnetic state down to zero kelvin. We found that GaV4Se8, a polar magnet with easy-plane anisotropy, hosts a robust Néel-type SkL even in its ground state. Our supporting theory confirms that polar magnets with weak uniaxial anisotropy are ideal candidates to realize SkLs with wide stability ranges.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Landau level spectroscopy of Dirac electrons in a polar semiconductor with giant Rashba spin splitting.

Sándor Bordács; Joseph Checkelsky; H. Murakawa; Harold Y. Hwang; Yoshinori Tokura

Optical excitations of BiTeI with large Rashba spin splitting have been studied in an external magnetic field (B) applied parallel to the polar axis. A sequence of transitions between the Landau levels (LLs), whose energies are in proportion to √B were observed, being characteristic of massless Dirac electrons. The large separation energy between the LLs makes it possible to detect the strongest cyclotron resonance even at room temperature in moderate fields. Unlike in 2D Dirac systems, the magnetic field induced rearrangement of the conductivity spectrum is directly observed.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Characteristics of ferroelectric-ferroelastic domains in Néel-type skyrmion host GaV 4 S 8

Ádám Butykai; Sándor Bordács; István Kézsmárki; V. Tsurkan; A. Loidl; Jonathan Döring; Erik Neuber; Peter Milde; Susanne C. Kehr; Lukas M. Eng

GaV4S8 is a multiferroic semiconductor hosting Néel-type magnetic skyrmions dressed with electric polarization. At Ts = 42 K, the compound undergoes a structural phase transition of weakly first-order, from a non-centrosymmetric cubic phase at high temperatures to a polar rhombohedral structure at low temperatures. Below Ts, ferroelectric domains are formed with the electric polarization pointing along any of the four 〈111〉 axes. Although in this material the size and the shape of the ferroelectric-ferroelastic domains may act as important limiting factors in the formation of the Néel-type skyrmion lattice emerging below TC = 13 K, the characteristics of polar domains in GaV4S8 have not been studied yet. Here, we report on the inspection of the local-scale ferroelectric domain distribution in rhombohedral GaV4S8 using low-temperature piezoresponse force microscopy. We observed mechanically and electrically compatible lamellar domain patterns, where the lamellae are aligned parallel to the (100)-type planes with a typical spacing between 100 nm–1.2 μm. Since the magnetic pattern, imaged by atomic force microscopy using a magnetically coated tip, abruptly changes at the domain boundaries, we expect that the control of ferroelectric domain size in polar skyrmion hosts can be exploited for the spatial confinement and manipulation of Néel-type skyrmions.


Physical Review B | 2015

Spin-Induced Polarizations and Nonreciprocal Directional Dichroism of the Room-Temperature Multiferroic BiFeO3

Randy Scott Fishman; Jun Hee Lee; Sándor Bordács; István Kézsmárki; Urmas Nagel; Toomas Room

A microscopic model for the room-temperature multiferroic BiFeO3 that includes two Dzyaloshinskii- Moriya interactions and single-ion anisotropy along the ferroelectric polarization predicts both the zero-field spectroscopic modes as well as their splitting and evolution in a magnetic field. Due to simultaneously broken time-reversal and spatial-inversion symmetries, the absorption of light changes as the magnetic field or the direction of light propagation is reversed. We discuss three physical mechanisms that may contribute to this absorption asymmetry known as nonreciprocal directional dichroism: the spin current, magnetostriction, and single-ion anisotropy. We conclude that the nonreciprocal directional dichroism in BiFeO3 is dominated by the spin-current polarization and is insensitive to the magnetostriction and easy-axis anisotropy. With three independent spin-current parameters, our model accurately describes the nonreciprocal directional dichroism observed for magnetic field along [1,−1,0]. Since some modes are almost transparent to light traveling in one direction but opaque for light traveling in the opposite direction, BiFeO3 behaves as a room-temperature optical diode at certain frequencies in the gigahertz to terahertz range. Our work demonstrates that an analysis of the nonreciprocal directional dichroism spectra based on an effective spin model supplemented by first-principles calculations can produce a quantitative microscopic theory of the magnetoelectric couplings in multiferroic materials.


Physical Review B | 2007

High-pressure infrared spectroscopy : Tuning of the low-energy excitations in correlated electron systems

I. Kézsmárki; R. Gaal; C. C. Homes; B. Sipos; H. Berger; Sándor Bordács; G. Mihály; László Forró

We have extended the range of the high-pressure optical spectroscopy to the far-infrared region keeping the accuracy of ambient-pressure experiments. The developed method offers a powerful tool for the study of pressure-induced phase transitions and electronic-structural changes in correlated electron systems as the optical pressure cell, equipped with large free-aperture diamond window, allows the measurement of optical reflectivity down to omega approximate to 20-30 cm(-1) for hydrostatic pressures up to p approximate to 26 kbar. The efficiency of the technique is demonstrated by the investigation of the two-dimensional charge-density-wave 1T-TaS2 whose electronic structure shows high sensitivity to external pressure. The room-temperature semimetallic phase of 1T-TaS2 is effectively extended by application of pressure and stabilized as the ground state above p=14 kbar. The corresponding fully incoherent low-energy optical conductivity is almost temperature independent below T=300 K. For intermediate pressures, the onset of the low-temperature insulating phase is reflected by the sudden drop of the reflectivity and by the emergence of sharp phonon resonances.

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István Kézsmárki

Budapest University of Technology and Economics

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I. Kézsmárki

Budapest University of Technology and Economics

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V. Tsurkan

University of Augsburg

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A. Loidl

University of Augsburg

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Toomas Room

National Institute of Chemical Physics and Biophysics

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Urmas Nagel

National Institute of Chemical Physics and Biophysics

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Ádám Butykai

Budapest University of Technology and Economics

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D. Szaller

Budapest University of Technology and Economics

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Karlo Penc

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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