37 research outputs found
Characterization of the Intra-Unit-Cell magnetic order in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+d
As in YBa2Cu3O6+x and HgBa2CuO8+d, the pseudo-gap state in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+d is
characterized by the existence of an intra-unit-cell magnetic order revealed by
polarized neutron scattering technique. We report here a supplementary set of
polarized neutron scattering measurements for which the direction of the
magnetic moment is determined and the magnetic intensity is calibrated in
absolute units. The new data allow a close comparison between bilayer systems
YBa2Cu3O6+x and Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+d and rise important questions concerning the
range of the magnetic correlations and the role of disorder around optimal
doping.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, submitted to physical review
Role of defects in determining the magnetic ground state of ytterbium titanate.
Pyrochlore systems are ideally suited to the exploration of geometrical frustration in three dimensions, and their rich phenomenology encompasses topological order and fractional excitations. Classical spin ices provide the first context in which it is possible to control emergent magnetic monopoles, and anisotropic exchange leads to even richer behaviour associated with large quantum fluctuations. Whether the magnetic ground state of Yb2Ti2O7 is a quantum spin liquid or a ferromagnetic phase induced by a Higgs transition appears to be sample dependent. Here we have determined the role of structural defects on the magnetic ground state via the diffuse scattering of neutrons. We find that oxygen vacancies stabilise the spin liquid phase and the stuffing of Ti sites by Yb suppresses it. Samples in which the oxygen vacancies have been eliminated by annealing in oxygen exhibit a transition to a ferromagnetic phase, and this is the true magnetic ground state
Signature of a randomness-driven spin-liquid state in a frustrated magnet
Collective behaviour of electrons, frustration induced quantum fluctuations
and entanglement in quantum materials underlie some of the emergent quantum
phenomena with exotic quasi-particle excitations that are highly relevant for
technological applications. Herein, we present our thermodynamic and muon spin
relaxation measurements, complemented by ab initio density functional theory
and exact diagonalization results, on the recently synthesized frustrated
antiferromagnet Li4CuTeO6, in which Cu2+ ions (S = 1/2) constitute disordered
spin chains and ladders along the crystallographic [101] direction with weak
random inter-chain couplings. Our thermodynamic experiments detect neither
long-range magnetic ordering nor spin freezing down to 45 mK despite the
presence of strong antiferromagnetic interaction between Cu2+ moments leading
to a large effective Curie-Weiss temperature of -154 K. Muon spin relaxation
results are consistent with thermodynamic results. The temperature and magnetic
field scaling of magnetization and specific heat reveal a data collapse
pointing towards the presence of random-singlets within a disorder-driven
correlated and dynamic ground-state in this frustrated antiferromagnet
Structure, spin correlations, and magnetism of the S = 1/2 square-lattice antiferromagnet Sr2CuTe1–xWxO6 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1)
Quantum spin liquids are highly entangled magnetic states with exotic properties. The S = 1/2 square-lattice Heisenberg model is one of the foundational models in frustrated magnetism with a predicted, but never observed, quantum spin liquid state. Isostructural double perovskites Sr2CuTeO6 and Sr2CuWO6 are physical realizations of this model but have distinctly different types of magnetic order and interactions due to a d10/d0 effect. Long-range magnetic order is suppressed in the solid solution Sr2CuTe1–xWxO6 in a wide region of x = 0.05–0.6, where the ground state has been proposed to be a disorder-induced spin liquid. Here, we present a comprehensive neutron scattering study of this system. We show using polarized neutron scattering that the spin liquid-like x = 0.2 and x = 0.5 samples have distinctly different local spin correlations, which suggests that they have different ground states. Low-temperature neutron diffraction measurements of the magnetically ordered W-rich samples reveal magnetic phase separation, which suggests that the previously ignored interlayer coupling between the square planes plays a role in the suppression of magnetic order at x ≈ 0.6. These results highlight the complex magnetism of Sr2CuTe1–xWxO6 and hint at a new quantum critical point between 0.2 < x < 0.4
Comment on “No evidence for orbital loop currents in charge-ordered YBa 2 Cu 3 O 6 + x from polarized neutron diffraction”
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