Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 7 de 7
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(9): 097201, 2022 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35302826

ABSTRACT

We investigate the magnetic excitations of elemental gadolinium (Gd) using inelastic neutron scattering, showing that Gd is a Dirac magnon material with nodal lines at K and nodal planes at half integer ℓ. We find an anisotropic intensity winding around the K-point Dirac magnon cone, which is interpreted to indicate Berry phase physics. Using linear spin wave theory calculations, we show the nodal lines have nontrivial Berry phases, and topological surface modes. We also discuss the origin of the nodal plane in terms of a screw-axis symmetry, and introduce a topological invariant characterizing its presence and effect on the scattering intensity. Together, these results indicate a highly nontrivial topology, which is generic to hexagonal close packed ferromagnets. We discuss potential implications for other such systems.

2.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 3936, 2021 Jun 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34168125

ABSTRACT

Recent theoretical proposals have argued that cobaltates with edge-sharing octahedral coordination can have significant bond-dependent exchange couplings thus offering a platform in 3d ions for such physics beyond the much-explored realisations in 4d and 5d materials. Here we present high-resolution inelastic neutron scattering data within the magnetically ordered phase of the stacked honeycomb magnet CoTiO3 revealing the presence of a finite energy gap and demonstrate that this implies the presence of bond-dependent anisotropic couplings. We also show through an extensive theoretical analysis that the gap further implies the existence of a quantum order-by-disorder mechanism that, in this material, crucially involves virtual crystal field fluctuations. Our data also provide an experimental observation of a universal winding of the scattering intensity in angular scans around linear band-touching points for both magnons and dispersive spin-orbit excitons, which is directly related to the non-trivial topology of the quasiparticle wavefunction in momentum space near nodal points.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 121(6): 067202, 2018 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30141658

ABSTRACT

Determining the fate of the Pauling entropy in the classical spin ice material Dy_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7} with respect to the third law of thermodynamics has become an important test case for understanding the existence and stability of ice-rule states in general. The standard model of spin ice-the dipolar spin ice model-predicts an ordering transition at T≈0.15 K, but recent experiments by Pomaranski et al. suggest an entropy recovery over long timescales at temperatures as high as 0.5 K, much too high to be compatible with the theory. Using neutron scattering and specific heat measurements at low temperatures and with long timescales (0.35 K/10^{6} s and 0.5 K/10^{5} s, respectively) on several isotopically enriched samples, we find no evidence of a reduction of ice-rule correlations or spin entropy. High-resolution simulations of the neutron structure factor show that the spin correlations remain well described by the dipolar spin ice model at all temperatures. Furthermore, by careful consideration of hyperfine contributions, we conclude that the original entropy measurements of Ramirez et al. are, after all, essentially correct: The short-time relaxation method used in that study gives a reasonably accurate estimate of the equilibrium spin ice entropy due to a cancellation of contributions.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 119(5): 057203, 2017 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28949704

ABSTRACT

The frustrated pyrochlore magnet Yb_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7} has the remarkable property that it orders magnetically but has no propagating magnons over wide regions of the Brillouin zone. Here we use inelastic neutron scattering to follow how the spectrum evolves in cubic-axis magnetic fields. At high fields we observe, in addition to dispersive magnons, a two-magnon continuum, which grows in intensity upon reducing the field and overlaps with the one-magnon states at intermediate fields leading to strong renormalization of the dispersion relations, and magnon decays. Using heat capacity measurements we find that the low- and high-field regions are smoothly connected with no sharp phase transition, with the spin gap increasing monotonically in field. Through fits to an extensive data set of dispersion relations combined with magnetization measurements, we reevaluate the spin Hamiltonian, finding dominant quantum exchange terms, which we propose are responsible for the anomalously strong fluctuations and quasiparticle breakdown effects observed at low fields.

5.
Rep Prog Phys ; 77(5): 056501, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24787264

ABSTRACT

The spin ice materials, including Ho2Ti2O7 and Dy2Ti2O7, are rare-earth pyrochlore magnets which, at low temperatures, enter a constrained paramagnetic state with an emergent gauge freedom. Spin ices provide one of very few experimentally realized examples of fractionalization because their elementary excitations can be regarded as magnetic monopoles and, over some temperature range, spin ice materials are best described as liquids of these emergent charges. In the presence of quantum fluctuations, one can obtain, in principle, a quantum spin liquid descended from the classical spin ice state characterized by emergent photon-like excitations. Whereas in classical spin ices the excitations are akin to electrostatic charges with a mutual Coulomb interaction, in the quantum spin liquid these charges interact through a dynamic and emergent electromagnetic field. In this review, we describe the latest developments in the study of such a quantum spin ice, focusing on the spin liquid phenomenology and the kinds of materials where such a phase might be found.


Subject(s)
Magnets , Models, Chemical , Niobium/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Solutions/chemistry , Spin Labels
6.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 23(16): 164219, 2011 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21471615

ABSTRACT

The rare earth pyrochlore magnet Yb(2)Ti(2)O(7) is among a handful of materials that apparently exhibit no long range order down to the lowest explored temperatures and well below the Curie-Weiss temperature. Paramagnetic neutron scattering on a single crystal sample has revealed the presence of anisotropic correlations and recent work has led to the proposal of a detailed microscopic Hamiltonian for this material involving significantly anisotropic exchange. In this paper, we compute the local sublattice susceptibility of Yb(2)Ti(2)O(7) from the proposed model and compare with the measurements of Cao et al (2009 Phys. Rev. Lett. 103 056402), finding quite good agreement. In contrast, a model with only isotropic exchange and long range magnetostatic dipolar interactions gives rise to a local susceptibility that is inconsistent with the data.

7.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 23(16): 164216, 2011 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21471617

ABSTRACT

The magnetic insulator Gd(2)Sn(2)O(7) is one of many geometrically frustrated magnetic materials known to exhibit a nonzero muon spin polarization relaxation rate, λ(T), down to the lowest temperature (T) studied. Such behaviour is typically interpreted as signalling the presence of persistent spin dynamics (PSD) of the host material. In the case of Gd(2)Sn(2)O(7), such PSD comes as a surprise since magnetic specific heat measurements suggest conventional gapped magnons, which would naively lead to an exponentially vanishing λ(T) as T → 0. In contrast to most materials that display PSD, the ordered phase of Gd(2)Sn(2)O(7) is well characterized and both the nature and the magnitude of the interactions have been inferred from the magnetic structure and the temperature dependence of the magnetic specific heat. Based on this understanding, the temperature dependence of the muon spin polarization relaxation through the scattering of spin waves (magnons) is calculated. The result explicitly shows that, despite the unusual extensive number of weakly dispersive (gapped) excitations characterizing Gd(2)Sn(2)O(7), a remnant of the zero modes of the parent frustrated pyrochlore Heisenberg antiferromagnet, the temperature dependence of the calculated λ(T) differs dramatically from the experimental one. Indeed, the calculation conforms to the naive expectation of an exponential collapse of λ(T) at temperatures below ∼ 0.7 K. This result, for the first time, illustrates crisply and quantitatively the paradox that presents itself with the pervasive occurrence of PSD in highly frustrated magnetic systems as evinced by muon spin relaxation measurements.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...