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Strain tuning of vestigial three-state Potts nematicity in a correlated antiferromagnet

ORAL

Abstract

Electronic nematicity is a state of matter in which rotational symmetry is spontaneously broken and translational symmetry is preserved. In strongly correlated materials, nematicity often emerges from fluctuations of a multicomponent primary order, such as spin or charge density waves, and is termed vestigial nematicity. One widely studied example is Ising nematicity, which arises as a vestigial order of collinear antiferromagnetism in the tetragonal iron pnictide superconductors. Because nematic directors in crystals are restricted by the underlying crystal symmetry, recently identified quantum materials with three-fold rotational symmetry offer a new platform to investigate nematic order with three-state Potts character. Here we demonstrate strain control of three-state Potts nematicity as a vestigial order of zigzag antiferromagnetism in FePSe3. Optical linear dichroism measurements reveal the nematic state and demonstrate the rotation of the nematic director by uniaxial strain. We show that the nature of the nematic phase transition can also be controlled by strain, inducing a smooth crossover transition between a Potts nematic transition and an Ising nematic flop transition. Elastocaloric measurements demonstrate the signatures of two coupled phase transitions, indicating that the vestigial nematic transition is separated from the antiferromagnetic transition. This establishes FePSe3 as a system to explore three-state Potts vestigial nematicity.

Publication: Hwangbo, K., Rosenberg, E., Cenker, J. et al. Strain tuning of vestigial three-state Potts nematicity in a correlated antiferromagnet. Nat. Phys. (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-024-02653-3

Presenters

  • Elliott W Rosenberg

    University of Washington

Authors

  • Elliott W Rosenberg

    University of Washington

  • Kyle Hwangbo

    University of Washington

  • John Cenker

    University of Washington

  • Qianni Jiang

    University of Washington, Stanford University

  • Haiden Wen

    Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne National Lab

  • Di Xiao

    University of Washington

  • Xiaodong Xu

    University of Washington

  • Jiun-Haw Chu

    University of Washington