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キーワード:
Binary alloys; Charged particles; Ground state; Niobium alloys; Oligomers; Photoelectron spectroscopy; Quantum theory; Specific heat; Ternary alloys; AC magnetization; Experimental investigations; IR network; Magnetic ground state; Magnetic-phase transition; Muon spin rotation/relaxation (μSR); Quantum spin liquid; Weiss temperatures; X ray photoemission spectroscopy; X-ray absorption spectroscopy; Magnetization
要旨:
We present an experimental investigation of the magnetic ground state in Ba4NbIr3O12, a fractional valent trimer iridate. X-ray absorption and photoemission spectroscopy show that the Ir valence lies between 3+ and 4+ while Nb is pentavalent. Combined dc/ac magnetization, specific heat, and muon spin rotation/relaxation (μSR) measurements reveal no magnetic phase transition down to 0.05 K. Despite a significant Weiss temperature (ΘW∼-15 to -25 K) indicating antiferromagnetic correlations, a quantum spin-liquid (QSL) phase emerges and persists down to 0.1 K. This state likely arises from geometric frustration in the edge-sharing equilateral triangle Ir network. Our μSR analysis reveals a two-component depolarization, arising from the coexistence of rapidly (90) and slowly (10) fluctuating Ir moments. Powder x-ray diffraction and Ir-L3edge x-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy identify 8-10 Nb/Ir site-exchange, reducing frustration within part of the Ir network, and likely leading to the faster muon spin relaxation, while the structurally ordered Ir ions remain highly geometrically frustrated, giving rise to the rapidly spin-fluctuating QSL ground state. At low temperatures, the magnetic specific heat varies as γT+αT2, indicating gapless spinon excitations, and possible Dirac QSL features with linear spinon dispersion, respectively. © 2024 authors. Published by the American Physical Society. Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI.