Observation of a High Magnetic Field-Induced Phase Transition in Frustrated Magnet Gadolinium Gallium Garnet
ORAL
Abstract
Gadolinium gallium garnet (Gd3Ga5O12), or GGG, is a frustrated magnet in which antiferromagnetic exchange interactions exist among Gd3+ ions located on two triangular sublattices. The geometric frustration prevents ordering, and the system is best described as a spin liquid at low temperatures. It has been shown that an applied magnetic field of ~1 T produces an antiferromagnetic phase below ~0.4 K, but properties of GGG in higher magnetic fields remain unexplored. Here, we have carried out terahertz magnetospectroscopy measurements on GGG in fields up to 25 T using a table-top pulsed magnet. We performed magnetic field- and temperature-dependent THz transmission measurements and observed a splitting of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) peak for Ga3+ ions. Our results indicate that, at high enough magnetic fields and low enough temperatures, there exists a new phase where EPR exhibits two peaks. By taking the 1-peak-to-2-peak transition point as the critical field/temperature, we constructed a phase diagram, which shows a critical magnetic field of ~17 T (~23 T) at 10 K (250 K). We will present a model that takes into account the effect of a strong magnetic field on the antiferromagnetic Gd-Gd exchange interactions on a triangular lattice.
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Presenters
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Junzhe Bao
Rice University
Authors
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Junzhe Bao
Rice University
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Nicolas Marquez Peraca
Rice Univ, Rice University
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Fuyang Tay
Rice Univ
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Timothy E Kritzell
Ohio State Univ - Columbus
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Xinwei Li
Rice Univ
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Gary T Noe
Rice Univ
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Ikufumi Katayama
Yokohama National University, Yokohama, Japan, Yokohama National University
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Jun Takeda
Yokohama National University, Yokohama, Japan, Yokohama National University
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Hiroyuki Nojiri
Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan, Tohoku University
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Hiroyasu Yamahara
University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
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Hitoshi Tabata
University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
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Andrey Baydin
Rice University
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Junichiro Kono
Rice Univ, Rice University