Formation of a Longitudinal Mode in One Dimensional Yb<sub>2</sub>Pt<sub>2</sub>Pb

ORAL

Abstract

The low energy magnetic excitations measured with neutron scattering (NS) in Yb2Pt2Pb are spinons on one dimensional chains, in good agreement with the expectations of the XXZ Hamiltonian for nearly isotropic S=±1/2 magnetic moments despite the large, rare earth Yb3+ moments that make up the system [1]. In applied magnetic field, we observe spinon confinement into bound states coinciding with a longitudinally polarized interchain mode [2]. New NS measurements probe the dispersion of this mode as a function of field in the vicinity of the confinement transition. We find weak modifications to the quantum continuum for fields approaching the critical field of 0.7 T, with the mode growing in intensity as field is increased through the transition. Interestingly, the antiferromagnetic order is strongly pinned with periodicity that does not evolve smoothly as a function of field as seen previously in a different orientation [2]. Rather, there is an abrupt transition to a weak, completely incommensurate order at 1.3 T with the mode correspondingly returning spectral weight to the continuum, reflecting strong low dimensional fluctuations even at fields near saturation.
[1] L. S. Wu, et al, Science 352, 1206 (2016).
[2] W. J. Gannon et al, submitted (2018).

*Funding provided by NSF-DMR-1807451

Presenters

  • Meigan Aronson

    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
    • Stewart Blusson Quantum Matter Institute, University of British Columbia

Authors

  • William Gannon

    • Stewart Blusson Quantum Matter Institute, University of British Columbia
  • Igor Zaliznyak

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory
    • CMPMS, Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Liusuo Wu

    • Southern University of Science and Technology
  • Alexei Tsvelik

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory
    • CMPMSD, Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Franz Demmel

    • ISIS facility, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
    • ISIS Neutron Source, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
  • Georg Ehlers

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • Oak Ridge National Lab
    • SNS, Oak Ridge National Lab
    • Neutron Scattering Division, Oak-Ridge National Laboratory
  • Andrei Podlesnyak

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Meigan Aronson

    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
    • Stewart Blusson Quantum Matter Institute, University of British Columbia