910 research outputs found
2D Kagome Ordering in the 3D Frustrated Spinel Li2Mn2O4
muSR experiments on the geometrically frustrated spinel oxide, Li2Mn2O4, show
the development of spin correlations over a range of length scales with
decreasing temperature. Increased relaxation below 150 K is consistent with the
onset of spin correlations. Below 50 K, spin order on a length scale, which is
long range for the muSR probe, appears abruptly in temperature, consistent with
prior neutron diffraction results. The oscillations in the zero field asymmetry
are analyzed using a three frequency model. By locating the muon site this is
shown to be consistent with the unexpected 2D q = root 3 x root 3 structure on
the Kagome planes proposed originally from neutron data. Longitudinal field
data demonstrate that some spin dynamics persist even at 2 K. Thus, a very
complex magnetic ground state, featuring the co-existence of long length scale
2D ordering and significant spin dynamics, is proposed. This is unusual
considering the 3D topology of the Mn3+ spins in this material.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, to be submitted to J. Phys. Cond. Mat
Surface collective modes in the topological insulators BiSe and BiSbTeSe
We used low-energy, momentum-resolved inelastic electron scattering to study
surface collective modes of the three-dimensional topological insulators
BiSe and BiSbTeSe. Our goal was to
identify the "spin plasmon" predicted by Raghu and co-workers [S. Raghu, et
al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 116401 (2010)]. Instead, we found that the primary
collective mode is a surface plasmon arising from the bulk, free carrers in
these materials. This excitation dominates the spectral weight in the bosonic
function of the surface, , at THz energy scales, and
is the most likely origin of a quasiparticle dispersion kink observed in
previous photoemission experiments. Our study suggests that the spin plasmon
may mix with this other surface mode, calling for a more nuanced understanding
of optical experiments in which the spin plasmon is reported to play a role.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Influence of Ti doping on the incommensurate charge density wave in 1T-TaS2
We report temperature-dependent transport and x-ray diffraction measurements
of the influence of Ti hole doping on the charge density wave (CDW) in
1T-Ta(1-x)Ti(x)S(2). Confirming past studies, we find that even trace
impurities eliminate the low-temperature commensurate (C) phase in this system.
Surprisingly, the magnitude of the in-plane component of the CDW wave vector in
the nearly commensurate (NC) phase does not change significantly with Ti
concentration, as might be expected from a changing Fermi surface volume.
Instead, the angle of the CDW in the basal plane rotates, from 11.9 deg at x=0
to 16.4 deg at x=0.12. Ti substitution also leads to an extended region of
coexistence between incommensurate (IC) and NC phases, indicating heterogeneous
nucleation near the transition. Finally, we explain a resistive anomaly
originally observed by DiSalvo [F. J. DiSalvo, et al., Phys. Rev. B {\bf 12},
2220 (1975)] as arising from pinning of the CDW on the crystal lattice. Our
study highlights the importance of commensuration effects in the NC phase,
particularly at x ~ 0.08
Muon Spin Relaxation Studies of Magnetic-Field-Induced Effects in High- Superconductors
Muon spin relaxation (SR) measurements in high transverse magnetic
fields () revealed strong field-induced quasi-static
magnetism in the underdoped and Eu doped (La,Sr)CuO and
LaBaCuO, existing well above and . The
susceptibility-counterpart of Cu spin polarization, derived from the muon spin
relaxation rate, exhibits a divergent behavior towards K. No
field-induced magnetism was detected in overdoped
LaSrCuO, optimally doped Bi2212, and Zn-doped
YBaCuO.Comment: 4 pages, 4 color figure
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