23 research outputs found
A Supercooled Spin Liquid State in the Frustrated Pyrochlore Dy2Ti2O7
A "supercooled" liquid develops when a fluid does not crystallize upon
cooling below its ordering temperature. Instead, the microscopic relaxation
times diverge so rapidly that, upon further cooling, equilibration eventually
becomes impossible and glass formation occurs. Classic supercooled liquids
exhibit specific identifiers including microscopic relaxation times diverging
on a Vogel-Tammann-Fulcher (VTF) trajectory, a Havriliak-Negami (HN) form for
the dielectric function, and a general Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts (KWW) form for
time-domain relaxation. Recently, the pyrochlore Dy2Ti2O7 has become of
interest because its frustrated magnetic interactions may, in theory, lead to
highly exotic magnetic fluids. However, its true magnetic state at low
temperatures has proven very difficult to identify unambiguously. Here we
introduce high-precision, boundary-free magnetization transport techniques
based upon toroidal geometries and gain a fundamentally new understanding of
the time- and frequency-dependent magnetization dynamics of Dy2Ti2O7. We
demonstrate a virtually universal HN form for the magnetic susceptibility, a
general KWW form for the real-time magnetic relaxation, and a divergence of the
microscopic magnetic relaxation rates with precisely the VTF trajectory. Low
temperature Dy2Ti2O7 therefore exhibits the characteristics of a supercooled
magnetic liquid; the consequent implication is that this translationally
invariant lattice of strongly correlated spins is evolving towards an
unprecedented magnetic glass state, perhaps due to many-body localization of
spin.Comment: Version 2 updates: added legend for data in Figures 4A and 4B;
corrected equation reference in caption for Figure 4
Disentangling superconducting and magnetic orders in NaFe_1-xNi_xAs using muon spin rotation
Muon spin rotation and relaxation studies have been performed on a "111"
family of iron-based superconductors NaFe_1-xNi_xAs. Static magnetic order was
characterized by obtaining the temperature and doping dependences of the local
ordered magnetic moment size and the volume fraction of the magnetically
ordered regions. For x = 0 and 0.4 %, a transition to a nearly-homogeneous long
range magnetically ordered state is observed, while for higher x than 0.4 %
magnetic order becomes more disordered and is completely suppressed for x = 1.5
%. The magnetic volume fraction continuously decreases with increasing x. The
combination of magnetic and superconducting volumes implies that a
spatially-overlapping coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity spans a
large region of the T-x phase diagram for NaFe_1-xNi_xAs . A strong reduction
of both the ordered moment size and the volume fraction is observed below the
superconducting T_C for x = 0.6, 1.0, and 1.3 %, in contrast to other iron
pnictides in which one of these two parameters exhibits a reduction below TC,
but not both. The suppression of magnetic order is further enhanced with
increased Ni doping, leading to a reentrant non-magnetic state below T_C for x
= 1.3 %. The reentrant behavior indicates an interplay between
antiferromagnetism and superconductivity involving competition for the same
electrons. These observations are consistent with the sign-changing s-wave
superconducting state, which is expected to appear on the verge of microscopic
coexistence and phase separation with magnetism. We also present a universal
linear relationship between the local ordered moment size and the
antiferromagnetic ordering temperature TN across a variety of iron-based
superconductors. We argue that this linear relationship is consistent with an
itinerant-electron approach, in which Fermi surface nesting drives
antiferromagnetic ordering.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, Correspondence should be addressed to Prof.
Yasutomo Uemura: [email protected]
Common glass-forming spin-liquid state in the pyrochlore magnets Dy2Ti2O7 and Ho2Ti2O7
Despite a well-ordered pyrochlore crystal structure and strong magnetic interactions between the Dy3+ or Ho3+ ions, no long-range magnetic order has been detected in the pyrochlore titanates Ho2Ti2O7 and Dy2Ti2O7. To explore the actual magnetic phase formed by cooling these materials, we measure their magnetization dynamics using toroidal, boundary-free magnetization transport techniques. We find that the dynamical magnetic susceptibility of both compounds has the same distinctive phenomenology, which is indistinguishable in form from that of the dielectric permittivity of dipolar glass-forming liquids. Moreover, Ho2Ti2O7 and Dy2Ti2O7 both exhibit microscopic magnetic relaxation times that increase along the super-Arrhenius trajectories analogous to those observed in glass-forming dipolar liquids. Thus, upon cooling below about 2 K, Dy2Ti2O7 and Ho2Ti2O7 both appear to enter the same magnetic state exhibiting the characteristics of a glass-forming spin liquid
Oxide Self-Flux in Optical Floating Zone Crystal Growth of Nickel Niobate (NiNb<sub>2</sub>O<sub>6</sub>)
Growing crystals of nickel niobate (NiNb2O6), we noticed that changing growth conditions allowed our material to enter different areas of the phase diagram. In particular, we found that excess material accumulated within and above the liquid zone. Analysis showed that this was an unincorporated constituent. Changing the ratio of the constituent oxides - an excess of ~4% of either NiO or Nb2O5 gave us the opportunity to investigate changes in zone stability, melting temperature and quality of the resulting crystal. We found that a small excess of nickel oxide decreases the melting temperature significantly, and created the best pseudo-rutile NiNb2O6 crystal studied, while higher amounts of niobium oxide allowed us to stabilize the NiNb2O6 columbite phase. This research reinforces the idea that self-flux as a travelling solvent can significantly impact crystal growth parameters and quality.</jats:p
Supercooled spin liquid state in the frustrated pyrochlore Dy<sub>2</sub>Ti<sub>2</sub>O<sub>7</sub>
A "supercooled" liquid develops when a fluid does not crystallize upon cooling below its ordering temperature. Instead, the microscopic relaxation times diverge so rapidly that, upon further cooling, equilibration eventually becomes impossible and glass formation occurs. Classic supercooled liquids exhibit specific identifiers including microscopic relaxation times diverging on a Vogel-Tammann-Fulcher (VTF) trajectory, a Havriliak-Negami (HN) form for the dielectric function epsilon(omega,T), and a general Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts (KWW) form for time-domain relaxation. Recently, the pyrochlore Dy2Ti2O7 has become of interest because its frustrated magnetic interactions may, in theory, lead to highly exotic magnetic fluids. However, its true magnetic state at low temperatures has proven very difficult to identify unambiguously. Here, we introduce high-precision, boundary-free magnetization transport techniques based upon toroidal geometries and gain an improved understanding of the time-and frequency-dependent magnetization dynamics of Dy2Ti2O7. We demonstrate a virtually universal HN form for the magnetic susceptibility chi(omega, T), a general KWW form for the real-time magnetic relaxation, and a divergence of the microscopic magnetic relaxation rates with the VTF trajectory. Low-temperature Dy2Ti2O7 therefore exhibits the characteristics of a supercooled magnetic liquid. One implication is that this translationally invariant lattice of strongly correlated spins may be evolving toward an unprecedented magnetic glass state, perhaps due to many-body localization of spin.</p
Publisher's Note: Superconductivity and crystal structural origins of the metal-insulator transition in<mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"><mml:mrow><mml:msub><mml:mi>Ba</mml:mi><mml:mrow><mml:mn>6</mml:mn><mml:mo>−</mml:mo><mml:mi>x</mml:mi></mml:mrow></mml:msub><mml:msub><mml:mi>Sr</mml:mi><mml:mi>x</mml:mi></mml:msub><mml:msub><mml:mi>Nb</mml:mi><mml:mn>10</mml:mn></mml:msub><mml:msub><mml:mi mathvariant="normal">O</mml:mi><mml:mn>30</mml:mn></mml:msub></mml:mrow></mml:math>tetragonal tungsten bronzes [Phys. Rev. B<b>92</b>, 214508 (2015)]
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Superconductivity and crystal structural origins of the metal-insulator transition in Ba6−xSrxNb10O30 tetragonal tungsten bronzes
Ba6−xSrxNb10O30 solid solution with 0 x 6 forms the filled tetragonal tungsten bronze (TTB) structure. The Ba-end member crystallizes in the highest symmetry P4/mbm space group (a = b = 12.5842(18)A and ˚ c = 3.9995(8)A) and so do all the compositions with 0 ˚ x 5. The Sr-end member of the solid solution crystallizes in the tentatively assigned Amam space group (a∗ = 17.506(4)A, ˚ b∗ = 34.932(7)A, and ˚ c∗ = 7.7777(2)A). ˚ The latter space group is related to the parent P4/mbm TTB structure as a∗ ≈ √2a, b∗ ≈ 2 √2a, c∗ = 2c. Low-temperature specific heat measurements indicate that the Ba-rich compositions with x 2 are conventional BCS superconductors with TC 1.6 K and superconducting energy gaps of 0.38 meV. The values of the TC in the cation-filled Nb-based TTBs reported here are comparable with those of the unfilled KxWO3 and NaxWO3 TTBs having large alkali ion deficiency. As the unit cell volume decreases with increasing x, an unexpected metal-insulator transition (MIT) in Ba6−xSrxNb10O30 occurs at x 3. We discuss the possible origins of the MIT in terms of the carrier concentration, symmetry break, and Anderson localization. DOI: 1Engineering and Applied SciencesVersion of Recor
