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Structural and magnetic field effects on spin fluctuations in Sr$_{3}$Ru$_2$O$_7$

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 Added by Shantanu Mukherjee
 Publication date 2016
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We investigate the evolution of magnetic excitations in Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ using a three band tight binding model that takes into account the influence of Mn and Ti dopant ions. The effect of dopant ions on the Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ band structure has been included by taking into account the dopant induced suppression of the oxygen octahedral rotation in the tight binding band structure and changes in electron occupation. We find that the low energy spin fluctuations are dominated by three wave vectors around Q=$((0,0),(pi/2,pi/2))$, and $(pi,0)$ which compete with each other. As the octahedral rotation is suppressed with increasing doping, the three wave vectors evolve differently. In particular, the undoped compound has dominant wavevectors at Q=$((0,0),(pi/2,pi/2))$, but doping Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ leads to a significant enhancement in the spin susceptibility at the Q=$(pi,0)$ wavevector bringing the system closer to a magnetic instability. All the features calculated from our model are in agreement with neutron scattering experiments. We have also studied the effect of a c-axis Zeeman field on the low energy spin fluctuations. We find that an increasing magnetic field suppresses the AFM fluctuations and leads to stronger competition between the AFM and FM spin fluctuations. The magnetic field dependence observed in our calculations therefore supports the scenario that the observed nematic phase in the metamagnetic region in Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ is intimately related to the presence of a competing ferromagnetic instability.



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149 - A. Putatunda , G. Qin , W. Ren 2020
We investigated Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$, a quantum critical metal that shows a metamagnetic quantum phase transition and electronic nematicity, through density functional calculations. These predict a ferromagnetic ground state in contrast to the experimentally observed paramagnetism, raising the question of competing magnetic states and associated fluctuations that may suppress magnetic order. We did a search to identify such low energy antiferromagnetically ordered metastable states. We find that the lowest energy antiferromagnetic state has a striped order. This corresponds to the E-type order that has been shown to be induced by Mn alloying. We also note significant transport anisotropy in this E-type ordered state. These results are discussed in relation to experimental observations.
Strong spin-orbital coupling (SOC) was found previously to lead to dramatic effects in quantum materials, such as those found in topological insulators. It was shown theoretically that local noncentrosymmetricity resulting from the rotation of RuO$_6$ octahedral in Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ will also give rise to an effective SOCcite{SocSr327,MicroscopicnematicSr327}. In the presence of a magnetic field applied along a specific in-plane direction, the Fermi surface was predicted to undergo a reconstruction. Here we report results of our in-plane magnetoresistivity and magnetothermopower measurements on single crystals of Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ with an electrical or a thermal current applied along specific crystalline directions and a magnetic field rotating in the $ab$ plane (Fig. 1a), showing a minimal value for field directions predicted by the local noncentrosymmetricity theory. Furthermore, the thermopower, and therefore, the electron entropy, were found to be suppressed as the field was applied perpendicular to the thermal current, which suggests that the spin and the momentum in Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ are locked over substantial parts of the Fermi surface, likely originating from local noncentrosymmetricity as well.
252 - M. Zhu , Y. Wang , P. G. Li 2018
We report the magnetic and electronic properties of the bilayer ruthenate Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ upon Fe substitution for Ru. We find that Sr$_3$(Ru$_{1-x}$Fe$_x$)$_2$O$_7$ shows a spin-glass-like phase below 4 K for $x$ = 0.01 and commensurate E-type antiferromagnetically ordered insulating ground state characterized by the propagation vector $q_c$ = (0.25 0.25 0) for $x$ $geq$ 0.03, respectively, in contrast to the paramagnetic metallic state in the parent compound with strong spin fluctuations occurring at wave vectors $q$ = (0.09 0 0) and (0.25 0 0). The observed antiferromagnetic ordering is quasi-two-dimensional with very short correlation length along the $c$ axis, a feature similar to the Mn-doped Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$. Our results suggest that this ordered ground state is associated with the intrinsic magnetic instability in the pristine compound, which can be readily tipped by the local magnetic coupling between the 3$d$ orbitals of the magnetic dopants and Ru 4$d$ orbitals.
X-ray magnetic critical scattering measurements and specific heat measurements were performed on the perovskite iridate Sr$_3$Ir$_2$O$_7$. We find that the magnetic interactions close to the N{e}el temperature $T_N$ = 283.4(2) K are three-dimensional. This contrasts with previous studies which suggest two-dimensional behaviour like Sr$_2$IrO$_4$. Violation of the Harris criterion ($d u>2$) means that weak disorder becomes relevant. This leads a rounding of the antiferromagnetic phase transition at $T_N$, and modifies the critical exponents relative to the clean system. Specifically, we determine that the critical behaviour of Sr$_3$Ir$_2$O$_7$ is representative of the diluted 3D Ising universality class.
115 - B. S. Shivaram , Jing Luo , 2017
We report, for the first time, measurements of the third order, $chi_3$ and fifth order, $chi_5$, susceptibilities in an itinerant oxide metamagnet, Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$ for magnetic fields both parallel and perpendicular to the c-axis. These susceptibilities exhibit maxima in their temperature dependence such that $T_1 approx 2T_3 approx 4T_5$ where the $T_i$ are the position in temperature where a peak in the $i$-th order susceptibility occurs. These features taken together with the scaling of the critical field with the temperature $T_1$ observed in a diverse variety of itinerant metamagnets find a natural explanation in a single band model with one Van Hove singularity (VHS) and onsite repulsion $U$. The separation of the VHS from the Fermi energy $Delta$, sets a single energy scale, which is the primary driver for the observed features of itinerant metamagnetism at low temperatures.
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