| Literature DB >> 28765523 |
K A Modic1,2, B J Ramshaw3,4, J B Betts3, Nicholas P Breznay5,6, James G Analytis5,6, Ross D McDonald3, Arkady Shekhter7.
Abstract
The complex antiferromagnetic orders observed in the honeycomb iridates are a double-edged sword in the search for a quantum spin-liquid: both attesting that the magnetic interactions provide many of the necessary ingredients, while simultaneously impeding access. Focus has naturally been drawn to the unusual magnetic orders that hint at the underlying spin correlations. However, the study of any particular broken symmetry state generally provides little clue about the possibility of other nearby ground states. Here we use magnetic fields approaching 100 Tesla to reveal the extent of the spin correlations in γ-lithium iridate. We find that a small component of field along the magnetic easy-axis melts long-range order, revealing a bistable, strongly correlated spin state. Far from the usual destruction of antiferromagnetism via spin polarization, the high-field state possesses only a small fraction of the total iridium moment, without evidence for long-range order up to the highest attainable magnetic fields.The complex antiferromagnetic orders observed in the honeycomb iridates prevent access to a spin-liquid ground state. Here the authors apply extremely high magnetic fields to destroy the antiferromagnetic order in γ-lithium iridate and reveal a bistable, strongly correlated spin state.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28765523 PMCID: PMC5539315 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00264-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Crystal structure and anisotropic magnetic behavior of γ-lithium iridate. a, b Magnetic anisotropy, represented by τ/H, as a function of magnetic field H in the bc- and hc-planes at 4 K. A sharp and highly anisotropic feature defined as H * marks the suppression of long-range magnetic order and entry into a spin-fluid state. The angle θ in the legend is defined between the external magnetic field direction and the ab-plane such that θ = 90° corresponds to magnetic field aligned along the c-axis in both data sets. c The three-dimensional crystal structure of γ-lithium iridate, comprised of two orientations of iridium honeycomb planes. The diamond-shaped schematic of the crystal morphology is a reflection of the crystal structure when viewed along the c-axis. The crystal is rotated in a, b with respect to the external magnetic field in the planes depicted by the white lines in c, which also illustrate the orientation of the bc- and hc- rotational planes with respect to the two interwoven honeycomb planes. The colors on the diamond represent the direction of the applied magnetic field with respect to the crystallographic directions (a = green, b = blue and c = red) for the measurements shown in a, b, with the color gradient mapping field direction for those angles between the principal directions. d τ/H as a function of temperature with magnetic field applied ~5° from the b-axis shows a crossover from a sharp transition to long-range order at fields below H * to a smooth change in torque that characterizes the onset of spin correlations at fields above H *
Fig. 2Angle dependence of H *. a H * vs. rotation angle θ for both the bc- and b hc- rotational planes, with θ defined as the angle between the ab-plane and the magnetic field. c 1/H * plotted vs. |H |/|H|. The magnitude of 1/H * collapses approximately to a straight line for field rotation in both planes, illustrating that H * depends entirely on M
Fig. 3Evolution of the angle dependence of τ/H with increasing magnetic field at low temperatures. a At 4 K, τ/H evolves from a characteristic sin 2θ angle dependence at small fields to b a correlation-driven sin θ sign(cos θ) angle dependence at high fields. The discontinuity in τ/H across the c-axis (θ = 90°) implies Ising-like behavior of the magnetization along the crystallographic b-direction. c The angle dependence of τ/H in the bc-plane at discrete field values shows a clear deviation from sin 2θ behavior that persists up to 55 T
Fig. 4The temperature/magnetic field phase diagram and its relation to the spin-anisotropic exchange interactions of γ-lithium iridate. a The temperature evolution of the magnetic anisotropy represented by A/A 2. A and A 2 are the coefficients determined by fitting the fixed-temperature angle dependence of the torque at fields above H * (inset) to . b Schematic representation of the temperature/magnetic field phase diagram of γ-lithium iridate. At low temperatures, the ordered phase (dark blue) extends to H = 3 T for magnetic fields along the b-axis. The correlated spin-fluid (light blue) likely persists to magnetic fields above 100 T. The faint lines represent regions of the phase diagram explored with constant field and temperature values in a and d, respectively. c The iridium-iridium exchange pathways mediated by oxygen octahedra. The principle components of the exchange tensor J between two iridium ions (defined via the exchange energy J S S ) are determined by the orientation the Ir-O2-Ir plaquette which connects them together. The arrows represent the direction perpendicular to the Ir-O2-Ir plaquette for each of the nearest neighbor bonds. The view along the b-axis illustrates that only one orientation of the Ir-O2-Ir planes is perpendicular to a crystal direction. This is the only direction for which the exchange interaction is finite in the Kitaev analysis of the ground state of this complex spin system. d τ/H shown for two principal components of magnetic anisotropy (α and α ) up to 90 T, highlighting the special role of M