APS Logo

Complex phase diagram of the honeycomb iridate Cu<sub>2</sub>IrO<sub>3</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

The recently synthesized family of intercalated Jeff = 1/2 honeycomb iridates feature promising evidence for hosting the Kitaev quantum spin liquid state. Here, we explore the high-pressure phase diagram of the intercalated honeycomb Cu2IrO3 at room temperature and 15 K using x-ray scattering and spectroscopy, as well as ab initio evolutionary structure search1. Compression below 10 GPa drives a structural phase transition marked by the formation of Ir-Ir dimers that destroy the Jeff orbitals. A discontinuous reduction in interplanar distance occurs around 15 GPa and 30 GPa at room and low temperatures, respectively, but the resulting high-pressure diffraction patterns are markedly different. More importantly, the low temperature phase features a dramatic Cu to Ir electron transfer not seen at room temperature. The potential origins of such large electronic structure temperature dependence and the implications to other honeycomb iridates will be discussed.

1) Fabbris et al., Phys. Rev. B 104, 014102 (2021)

Publication: Fabbris et al., Physical Review B 104, 014102 (2021);<br>We plan to publish a paper in 2022 with extensive spectroscopic data, some of which will be included in this talk.

Presenters

  • Gilberto F Fabbris

    Argonne National Laboratory

Authors

  • Gilberto F Fabbris

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Aidan Thorn

    Binghamton University

  • Wenli Bi

    University of Alabama at Birmingham

  • Mykola Abramchuk

    Boston College

  • Faranak Bahrami

    Boston College

  • Jungho Kim

    Argonne National Laboratory, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Eduardo H Poldi

    University of Illinois at Chicago

  • Mary Upton

    Argonne National Lab, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Toru Shinmei

    Ehime University

  • Tetsuo Irifune

    Ehime University

  • Fazel Tafti

    Boston College

  • Aleksey Kolmogorov

    Binghamton University, Binghamton U.

  • Daniel Haskel

    Argonne National Laboratory