Neutron scattering study on Eu<sub>3</sub>Sn<sub>2</sub>S
ORAL
Abstract
Geometrically frustrated magnets are an important field of research, and recent interest has grown in investigating materials with various geometric lattices. Eu3Sn2S7 is a particularly interesting candidate [1], due to its quasi-2-dimensional lattice made up of pentagonal motifs and its potential to exhibit magnetic frustration [2] different from those observed in lattices consisting of triangles. In Eu3Sn2S7, Eu2+ carries a large magnetic moment of a spin 7/2. Our previous magnetic susceptibility measurements showed that the estimated Curie-Weiss temperature is comparable to the magnetic transition temperature, indicating limited magnetic frustration. However, a field-dependent magnetization measurement conducted at low temperatures unveiled a magnetization plateau between H = 0.5 T and 2 T, with a magnitude of magnetization approximately 1/6 of the saturated moment. To understand the origin of this magnetization plateau, we conducted systematic neutron diffraction experiments on a single crystal of Eu3Sn2S7 under various magnetic field conditions and were able to establish a connection between the underlying magnetic structure and its anomalous behavior of magnetization. Our results highlight the rich physics hosted by a pentagonal lattice and call for further investigation into this family of materials.
Reference
[1] Par S. Jaulmes and M. Julien-Pouzol, Acta Cryst. B33, 3898-3899 (1977).
[2] I. Rousochatzkis, A.M. Lauchli, and R. Moessner, Phys. Rev. B 85, 104415 (2012).
Reference
[1] Par S. Jaulmes and M. Julien-Pouzol, Acta Cryst. B33, 3898-3899 (1977).
[2] I. Rousochatzkis, A.M. Lauchli, and R. Moessner, Phys. Rev. B 85, 104415 (2012).
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Publication: None
Presenters
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Yu Li
Argonne National Laboratory
Authors
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Yu Li
Argonne National Laboratory
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Xinglong Chen
Argonne National Laboratory
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Hengdi Zhao
Argonne National Laboratory
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Yan Wu
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Yiqing Hao
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Daniel Phelan
Argonne National Laboratory
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Stephan Rosenkranz
Argonne National Laboratory