Single crystal growth of iridates without platinum impurities
ORAL
Abstract
Iridates have attracted much interest in the last decade for their novel magnetism emerging in the limit of strong spin-orbit coupling and possible unconventional superconductivity. A standard for growing single crystalline iridate has been the flux method using a platinum crucible. In this talk, we show that this widely used method compromises the sample quality by inclusion of platinum impurities. We find that single crystals of Sr2IrO4 grown in iridium crucibles show remarkable differences in characterizations using Raman spectroscopy, resonant inelastic X-ray scattering, and resistivity measurements. In particular, our Raman spectra are free of previously unidentified A1g peaks of sizable magnitudes, which point to their defect origin creating in-gap states. This interpretation is supported by the much larger activation energy extracted from our resistivity data. While the platinum inclusion went unnoticed in the stoichiometric insulating phase for a long time, its effects can be much more detrimental to transport properties of doping-induced metallic states. Therefore, our result suggests using growth methods that avoid platinum impurities for exploration of possible superconducting phases in iridates.
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Presenters
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Jimin Kim
- Institute for Basic Science