‘Tuning’ nonmagnetic material reveals hidden magnetic state

MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (04/01/2026) — Researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have discovered a new way to turn a common, nonmagnetic material into a high-temperature “altermagnet”—a recently proposed and unusual form of magnetism.

The discovery, published in PNAS, provides a new framework for designing materials for faster and more efficient electronic and spintronic devices. 

Altermagnets combine the best parts of two different types of materials. They have the reliability of the magnets we use today, but don't produce the magnetic interference that usually slows down electronics. Although theoretical work had suggested that the material, RuO2, might have a magnetic state, experimental evidence had remained difficult to find for years.

To resolve this long-standing question, the team took a different approach. Instead of studying RuO2 in its natural, relaxed state—or bulk form, they engineered the material as an ultra-thin film and applied epitaxial strain—a technique that gently stretches a crystal at the atomic scale. This precise stretching altered the material’s internal symmetry and revealed a magnetic phase that does not exist in bulk RuO2.

“RuO2 is like a slack guitar string that doesn’t produce any sound,” said Bharat Jalan, the Shell Chair Professor in the University of Minnesota Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science and senior author on the paper. “By carefully stretching the material, we effectively tuned it until a hidden magnetic state emerged. The key was controlling the material’s structure at the atomic level with extreme precision, ensuring every atom was exactly where it needed to be.”

Using state-of-the-art epitaxial synthesis and advanced laser-based optical probes, the researchers directly observed the transition to an altermagnetic state in films only two nanometers thick—about 50,000 times thinner than a human hair. These tools allowed the team to not only stabilize hidden magnetism but also mapping the electronic and magnetic phase diagram with unprecedented precision. 

The research was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the U.S. Department of Energy with experiments carried out in part at the University of Minnesota Characterization Facility.

Learn more about this study at the CSE website.

Read the full paper entitled, “Altermagnetic Polar Metallic phase in Ultra-Thin Epitaxially Strained RuO2 Films,” on the PNAS website.

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