Abstract
We investigated temperature-driven spin reorientation (SR) in the itinerant kagome magnet Fe3Sn2 using high-resolution synchrotron x-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction, magnetometry, and magnetic force microscopy (MFM), further supported by phenomenological analysis. Our study reveals a crossover from the state with easy-plane anisotropy to the high-temperature state with uniaxial easy-axis anisotropy taking place between ∼40 and 130 K through an intermediate easy-cone (or tilted spin) state. This state, induced by the interplay between the anisotropy constants 𝐾1 and 𝐾2, is clearly manifested in the thermal evolution of the magnetic structure factor, which reveals a gradual change of the SR angle 𝜃 between 40 and 130 K. We also found that the SR is accompanied by a magnetoelastic effect. Zero-field MFM images across the SR range show a transformation in surface magnetic patterns from a dendritic structure at 120 K to domain-wall-dominated MFM contrast at 40 K. Our analysis suggests that the SR and associated microstructural transformations are the results of competing first- and second-order anisotropy constants.