论文标题
在ba $ _3 $ laru $ _2 $ o $ $ _9 $的分子水平上实现轨道选择性莫特州立大学
Realization of the orbital-selective Mott state at the molecular level in Ba$_3$LaRu$_2$O$_9$
论文作者
论文摘要
基于重型过渡金属的分子磁铁最近引起了人们对新型磁性特性的重大兴趣。对于每个分子具有奇数价电子的系统,通常在双交换或准分子轨道极限分别期望高分子自旋态。 In this work, we use bulk characterization, muon spin relaxation, neutron diffraction, and inelastic neutron scattering to identify a rare intermediate spin-3/2 per dimer state in the 6H-perovskite Ba$_3$LaRu$_2$O$_9$ that cannot be understood in a double exchange or quasi-molecular orbital picture and instead arises from orbital-selective Mott insulating behavior at the分子水平。我们的测量值还表示这些分子自旋-3/2自由度的共线条纹磁序$ t_n $ = 26(1)k,这与对理想三角形晶格具有重要的下一个最近的接面内置交换的期望是一致的。最后,我们在施加压力下提出了中子衍射和拉曼散射数据,该压力揭示了较低的结构和自旋状态过渡,以适度的压力p $ \ le $ 1 GPA,这突出了该系统中竞争能量尺度之间的微妙平衡。
Molecular magnets based on heavy transition metals have recently attracted significant interest in the quest for novel magnetic properties. For systems with an odd number of valence electrons per molecule, high or low molecular spin states are typically expected in the double exchange or quasi-molecular orbital limits respectively. In this work, we use bulk characterization, muon spin relaxation, neutron diffraction, and inelastic neutron scattering to identify a rare intermediate spin-3/2 per dimer state in the 6H-perovskite Ba$_3$LaRu$_2$O$_9$ that cannot be understood in a double exchange or quasi-molecular orbital picture and instead arises from orbital-selective Mott insulating behavior at the molecular level. Our measurements are also indicative of collinear stripe magnetic order below $T_N$ = 26(1) K for these molecular spin-3/2 degrees-of-freedom, which is consistent with expectations for an ideal triangular lattice with significant next nearest neighbor in-plane exchange. Finally, we present neutron diffraction and Raman scattering data under applied pressure that reveal low-lying structural and spin state transitions at modest pressures P $\le$ 1 GPa, which highlights the delicate balance between competing energy scales in this system.