Frustration, dipolar, and quadrupolar physics on the square lattice oxyhalides DyOX (X=Cl,Br,I)
ORAL
Abstract
“Rare-earth ions are an important ingredient in frustrated magnetism due to their propensity for anisotropic magnetization distributions. Due to this and their crystal field splitting allowing for an effective spin-½ degrees of freedom, they are commonly investigated in the search for exotic magnetic phases of matter. The Dysprosium Oxy-halides (DyOX, X=Cl,Br,I) have come under recent investigation as both layered Van der Waals materials [1] and a realization of a frustrated J1-J2 model (this work), with interplanar spacing being a function of the halide’s ionic radius. This, paired with Dysprosium’s high magnetic moment and single-ion quadrupolar behavior, leads DyOX to be an exciting platform to study specific aspects of quantum magnetism that are generally difficult to probe. This talk will present several forms of data: neutron diffraction and scattering, thermomagnetic measurements, and simulation results to elucidate their magnetic properties. The results systematically show two ordering transitions, yet dramatically different magnetic structures across the family of compounds. We will compare these compounds’ magnetic properties, as well as the origin of this unique behavior.”
[1] Tian, Congkuan, Feihao Pan, Le Wang, Dehua Ye, Jieming Sheng, Jinchen Wang, Juanjuan Liu, et al. “DyOCl: A Rare-Earth Based Two-Dimensional van Der Waals Material with Strong Magnetic Anisotropy.” Physical Review B 104, no. 21 (December 7, 2021): 214410. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.214410.
[1] Tian, Congkuan, Feihao Pan, Le Wang, Dehua Ye, Jieming Sheng, Jinchen Wang, Juanjuan Liu, et al. “DyOCl: A Rare-Earth Based Two-Dimensional van Der Waals Material with Strong Magnetic Anisotropy.” Physical Review B 104, no. 21 (December 7, 2021): 214410. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.214410.
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Presenters
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David T Brooks
Georgia Institute of Technology
Authors
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David T Brooks
Georgia Institute of Technology
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Xiaojian Bai
Oak Ridge National Lab
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Stuart Calder
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY
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Ovidiu O Garlea
Oak Ridge National Lab
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Martin P Mourigal
Georgia Tech