Signatures of quantum dipole liquid in an organic Mott insulator κ-(BEDT-TTF)Hg(SCN)<sub>2</sub>Br

 · Invited

Abstract

Mott insulators are commonly pictured with electrons localized on lattice sites. Their low-energy physics involves spins only. Recent theoretical work suggests that in molecular systems a new on-site charge degree of freedom can emerge. On a frustrated lattice with charge-spin coupling it would result in a new quantum spin liquid state. We experimentally demonstrate [1] a presence of this fluctuating charge degree of freedom in a molecule-based Mott insulator κ-(BEDT-TTF)2Hg(SCN)2Br. When electrons localize on a triangular lattice of molecular dimers of this compound at temperatures below 100 K, they form electric dipoles which do not order at low temperatures and fluctuate, resulting in a so-called quantum dipole liquid state. A frequency of dipole fluctuations of 40 cm-1 is detected experimentally in our Raman spectroscopy experiments through an observation of a related collective mode. We show that this spectroscopic response of a quantum dipole liquid is qualitatively different from a response of molecular Mott insulators with no on-site charge degree of freedom. The Raman spectra of the latter show two-magnon excitations at frequencies below 500 cm-1 expected for a S=1/2 antiferromagnet on a triangular lattice with J≈250 K. Our results can be a key to understanding of organic triangular lattice spin liquid candidates.

References:
1. N. Hassan, S. Cunningham, M. Mourigal, E. I. Zhilyaeva, S. A. Torunova, R. N. Lyubovskaya, J. A. Schlueter, N. Drichko. Science, 360, 6393 (2018)

*This work was supported as part of the Institute for Quantum Matter, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0019331.

Presenters

  • Natalia Drichko

    • Johns Hopkins University

Authors

  • Natalia Drichko

    • Johns Hopkins University