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Magnetic resonance study of rare-earth titanates

ORAL

Abstract

Rare-earth titanates are model systems for investigations of the interplay among spin, orbital, and lattice degrees of freedom. Ground-state magnetic order, through subtle lattice distortions, is easily manipulated by the size of the rare-earth ion. Peculiar deviations from the Curie-Weiss law and anomalous magnetic behavior have been detected well above the ferromagnetic ordering temperature in the Mott-insulating parent compound YTiO3. We utilize magnetic resonance (NMR, ESR) techniques to explore these discrepancies. All measurements are conducted on single-crystalline samples of (Y, La, Ca)TiO3 [1] in wide ranges of charge (Ca) doping and isovalent (La) substitution. NMR confirms the existence of anomalies in the paramagnetic phase of these compounds. X-band ESR measurements detect a small splitting of the lower t2g orbital which scales with the sample Tc and could explain the unusual properties. We also directly measure the crystalline anisotropies of YTO3 in the magnetically ordered state using ferromagnetic resonance.

[1] S. Hameed et al. 10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.5.125003

Presenters

  • Ana Najev

    University of Zagreb, Univ of Zagreb

Authors

  • Ana Najev

    University of Zagreb, Univ of Zagreb

  • Alexey Alfonsov

    IFW Dresden

  • Christoph Wellm

    IFW Dresden

  • Sajna Hameed

    Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research

  • Martin Greven

    University of Minnesota

  • Vladislav Kataev

    IFW Dresden

  • Miroslav Požek

    University of Zagreb

  • Damjan Pelc

    University of Zagreb