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Pressure tuning of magnetism in pseudospin-1/2 honeycomb oxide Na<sub>2</sub>Co<sub>2</sub>TeO<sub>6</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Honeycomb magnets have attracted significant interest because of their potential for realizing exotic magnetic states including the Kitaev quantum spin liquid phase. Among various Kitaev candidates, Na2Co2TeO6 is a d7 high-spin compound in which the pseudospin-1/2 Co2+ ions form a long-range antiferromagnetic order below ~27 K. As pressure is an effective parameter to tune interactions in many systems, here we study the possibility of tuning the ordered state of Na2Co2TeO6 into a spin disordered or liquid state under the application of hydrostatic pressure up to 13 kbar. Temperature dependence of magnetization at ambient pressure shows a magnetic phase transition at TN ~27 K, which is followed by a minor kink at TF~16 K. While pressure has a negligible influence on the magnetic ordering temperature, it reduces the out-of-plane magnetization between 16 K and 27 K. We will further discuss how the pressure influences the in-plane magnetization as well as the critical magnetic field at which a spin-disordered like state is induced.  

Presenters

  • Tongxie Zhang

    Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana University

Authors

  • Tongxie Zhang

    Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana University

  • Liangzi Deng

    University of Houston, Texas Center for Superconductivity and Department of Physics, University of Houston, Texas Center for Superconductivity and Department of Physics, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA

  • Qing Huang

    University of Tennessee

  • Sammy Bourji

    University of Houston

  • Gaihua Ye

    Texas Tech University, TTU

  • Kevin Gutierrez

    Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana University, Bloomington

  • Rui He

    Texas Tech Univ, Texas Tech University

  • Haidong Zhou

    University of Tennessee

  • Ching-Wu W Chu

    Texas Center for Superconductivity and Department of Physics, University of Houston, Texas Center for Superconductivity and Department of Physics, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA; Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA, University of Houston and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Shixiong Zhang

    Indiana University Bloomington