Recently, the iridate double perovskite Sr2YIrO6 has attracted
considerable attention due to the report of unexpected magnetism in this
Ir5+ (5d4) material, in which according to the Jeff model, a
non-magnetic ground state is expected. However, in recent works on
polycrystalline samples of the series Ba2−xSrxYIrO6 no indication of
magnetic transitions have been found. We present a structural, magnetic and
thermodynamic characterization of Sr2YIrO6 single crystals, with emphasis
on the temperature and magnetic field dependence of the specific heat. Here, we
demonstrate the clue role of single crystal X-ray diffraction on the structural
characterization of the Sr2YIrO6 double perovskite crystals by reporting
the detection of a 2a×2a×1c supercell, where a,
b and c are the unit cell dimensions of the reported monoclinic subcell. In
agreement with the expected non-magnetic ground state of Ir5+ (5d4) in
Sr2YIrO6, no magnetic transition is observed down to 430~mK. Moreover,
our results suggest that the low temperature anomaly observed in the specific
heat is not related to the onset of long-range magnetic order. Instead, it is
identified as a Schottky anomaly caused by paramagnetic impurities present in
the sample, of the order of n∼0.5(2) \%. These impurities lead to
non-negligible spin correlations, which nonetheless, are not associated with
long-range magnetic ordering.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure