High temperature singlet-based magnetism from Hund’s rule correlations
/ Authors
L. Miao, Rourav Basak, S. Ran, Yishuai Xu, Erica Kotta, Haowei He, J. Denlinger, Y. Chuang, Yang Zhao, Zhijun Xu
and 10 more authors
J. Lynn, J. Jeffries, S. Saha, I. Giannakis, P. Aynajian, Chang‐Jong Kang, Yilin Wang, G. Kotliar, N. Butch, L. Wray
/ Abstract
Uranium compounds can manifest a wide range of fascinating many-body phenomena, and are often thought to be poised at a crossover between localized and itinerant regimes for 5f electrons. The antiferromagnetic dipnictide USb2 has been of recent interest due to the discovery of rich proximate phase diagrams and unusual quantum coherence phenomena. Here, linear-dichroic X-ray absorption and elastic neutron scattering are used to characterize electronic symmetries on uranium in USb2 and isostructural UBi2. Of these two materials, only USb2 is found to enable strong Hund’s rule alignment of local magnetic degrees of freedom, and to undergo distinctive changes in local atomic multiplet symmetry across the magnetic phase transition. Theoretical analysis reveals that these and other anomalous properties of the material may be understood by attributing it as the first known high temperature realization of a singlet ground state magnet, in which magnetism occurs through a process that resembles exciton condensation. Electrons in uranium-based materials are often on the border between localised and itinerant behaviour, which can lead to unusual magnetic behaviour. Here the authors combine experiment and theory to show that USb2 may be an unusually high temperature example of a singlet-ground-state magnet.
Journal: Nature Communications