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A new spin-anisotropic harmonic honeycomb iridate

Authors :
Modic, Kimberly A.
Smidt, Tess E.
Kimchi, Itamar
Breznay, Nicholas P.
Biffin, Alun
Choi, Sungkyun
Johnson, Roger D.
Coldea, Radu
Watkins-Curry, Pilanda
McCandless, Gregory T.
Gandara, Felipe
Islam, Z.
Vishwanath, Ashvin
Chan, Julia Y.
Shekhter, Arkady
McDonald, Ross D.
Analytis, James G.
Source :
Nature Communications 5, 4203 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The physics of Mott insulators underlies diverse phenomena ranging from high temperature superconductivity to exotic magnetism. Although both the electron spin and the structure of the local orbitals play a key role in this physics, in most systems these are connected only indirectly --- via the Pauli exclusion principle and the Coulomb interaction. Iridium-based oxides (iridates) open a further dimension to this problem by introducing strong spin-orbit interactions, such that the Mott physics has a strong orbital character. In the layered honeycomb iridates this is thought to generate highly spin-anisotropic interactions, coupling the spin orientation to a given spatial direction of exchange and leading to strongly frustrated magnetism. The potential for new physics emerging from such interactions has driven much scientific excitement, most recently in the search for a new quantum spin liquid, first discussed by Kitaev \cite{kitaev_anyons_2006}. Here we report a new iridate structure that has the same local connectivity as the layered honeycomb, but in a three-dimensional framework. The temperature dependence of the magnetic susceptibility exhibits a striking reordering of the magnetic anisotropy, giving evidence for highly spin-anisotropic exchange interactions. Furthermore, the basic structural units of this material suggest the possibility of a new family of structures, the `harmonic honeycomb' iridates. This compound thus provides a unique and exciting glimpse into the physics of a new class of strongly spin-orbit coupled Mott insulators.<br />Comment: 12 pages including bibliography, 5 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Communications 5, 4203 (2014)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1402.3254
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5203