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Interplay between magnetic exchange, multipolar interactions and virtual crystal field fluctuations in non-Kramers pyrochlore magnets

ORAL

Abstract

It has been shown that multipolar degrees of freedom can play a vital role in causing exotic phases in pyrochlore magnets, such as octupoles in Kramers Nd3+ or Ce3+ ions and quadrupoles in non-Kramers Pr3+ and Tb3+ ions. Terbium-based pyrochlores are peculiar for hosting virtual crystal field excitation (VCFE) due to the small energy separation between the two low-lying crystal electric field doublets. Here we consider a two-doublets system with magnetic bilinear exchange and electric quadrupole-quadrupole interaction. Via a mean field approach, we show that the proposed model exhibits complex dipolar and quadrupolar phases. Different dipolar order parameters coexist due to VCFE, which also leads to a “parasitic” ferroquadrupolar order accompanying the dominant antiferroquadrupolar order. We find for a set of model parameters locating the system near the dipolar/quadrupolar phase boundary that, upon cooling, such system may undergo a two-step thermal transition into the ultimate low-temperature dipolar phase with an intermediated quadrupolar ordered state. We also propose a range of acceptable parameters for the Tb2Ge2O7 pyrochlore that allows us to reproduce some of the main inelastic neutron scattering features.

Presenters

  • Wen Jin

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Waterloo, University of Waterloo

Authors

  • Wen Jin

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Waterloo, University of Waterloo

  • Michel J P Gingras

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Waterloo, University of Waterloo, Department of Physics, University of Waterloo

  • Hallas Alannah

    University of British Columbia

  • Jonathan Gaudet

    The Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins University, Institute for Quantum Matter and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University

  • Bruce D. Gaulin

    Physics, McMaster University, McMaster Univ, McMaster University, Department of Physics & Astronomy, McMaster University