Evidence for coexisting magnetic order in frustrated three-dimensional honeycomb iridates Li$_{2}$IrO$_{3}$

ORAL

Abstract

The search for unconventional magnetism has found a fertile hunting ground in 5d iridium oxide (iridate) materials. The competition between coulomb, spin-orbit, and crystal field energy scales in honeycomb iridates leads to a quantum magnetic system with localized spin-1/2 moments communicating through spin-anisotropic Kitaev exchange interactions. Although early and ongoing work has focused on layered two-dimensional honeycomb compounds such as Na$_{2}$IrO$_{3}$ and a 4d analog, RuCl$_{3}$, recently discovered polytypes of Li$_{2}$IrO$_{3}$ take on three-dimensional honeycomb structures. Bulk thermodynamic studies, as well as recent resonant x-ray diffraction and absorption spectroscopy experiments, have uncovered a rich phase diagram for these three-dimensional honeycomb iridates. Low temperature incommensurate and commensurate magnetic orders can be stabilized by tuning the applied magnetic field, displaying a delicate coexistence that signals highly frustrated magnetism.

Authors

  • Nicholas Breznay

    • University of California, Berkeley
    • UC Berkeley
  • Alejandro Ruiz

    • University of California, Berkeley
  • Alex Frano

    • University of California, Berkeley
  • James Analytis

    • University of California, Berkeley