Large, non-saturating magnetoresistivity and magnetic anisotropy in the iridate BaIrO3
ORAL
Abstract
The hexagonal BaIrO3 is an antiferromagnetic (AFM) insulator with a charge gap of 0.1 eV. It undergoes a sharp magnetic transition at 182 K with an order magnetic moment smaller than 0.1 Bohr magneton. This compound is known for decades, but its physical properties are largely unexplored. Results of our recent study of this system reveal an unusually large, non-saturating magnetoresistivity up to 36 Tesla and a strong magnetic anisotropy. In addition, a close examination of structural properties of this material, along with results of early studies, confirms the existence of a charge density wave (CDW) that may co-exist with the AFM state. We present and discuss structural, transport, magnetic, and thermal properties of this and other related compounds as functions of temperature, magnetic field, and pressure.
*This work was supported by the National Science Foundation via grant DMR-1712101.
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Presenters
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Hengdi Zhao
- Department of Physics, Univ of Colorado - Boulder
- Department of Physics, University of Colorado
- University of Colorado at Boulder