No Arabic abstract
We report on the unusual behavior of the in-plane thermal conductivity ($kappa$) and torque ($tau$) response in the Kitaev-Heisenberg material $alpha$-RuCl$_3$. $kappa$ shows a striking enhancement with linear growth beyond H = 7 T, where magnetic order disappears, while $tau$ for both of the in-plane symmetry directions shows an anomaly at the same field. The temperature- and field-dependence of $kappa$ are far more complex than conventional phonon and magnon contributions, and require us to invoke the presence of unconventional spin excitations whose properties are characteristic of a field-induced spin-liquid phase related to the enigmatic physics of the Kitaev model in an applied magnetic field
We have investigated the longitudinal thermal conductivity of $alpha$-RuCl$_{3}$, the magnetic state of which is considered to be proximate to a Kitaev honeycomb model, along with the spin susceptibility and magnetic specific heat. We found that the temperature dependence of the thermal conductivity exhibits an additional peak around 100 K, which is well above the phonon peak temperature ($sim$ 50 K). The higher-temperature peak position is comparable to the temperature scale of the Kitaev couplings rather than the Neel temperatures below 15 K. The additional heat conduction was observed for all five samples used in this study, and was found to be rather immune to a structural phase transition of $alpha$-RuCl$_{3}$, which suggests its different origin from phonons. Combined with experimental results of the magnetic specific heat, our transport measurement suggests strongly that the higher-temperature peak in the thermal conductivity is attributed to itinerant spin excitations associated with the Kitaev couplings of $alpha$-RuCl$_{3}$. A kinetic approximation of the magnetic thermal conductivity yields a mean free path of $sim$ 20 nm at 100 K, which is well longer than the nearest Ru-Ru distance ($sim$ 3 AA), suggesting the long-distance coherent propagation of magnetic excitations driven by the Kitaev couplings.
The pure Kitaev honeycomb model harbors a quantum spin liquid in zero magnetic fields, while applying finite magnetic fields induces a topological spin liquid with non-Abelian anyonic excitations. This latter phase has been much sought after in Kitaev candidate materials, such as $alpha$-RuCl$_3$. Currently, two competing scenarios exist for the intermediate field phase of this compound ($B=7-10$ T), based on experimental as well as theoretical results: (i) conventional multiparticle magnetic excitations of integer quantum number vs. (ii) Majorana fermionic excitations of possibly non-Abelian nature with a fractional quantum number. To discriminate between these scenarios a detailed investigation of excitations over a wide field-temperature phase diagram is essential. Here we present Raman spectroscopic data revealing low-energy quasiparticles emerging out of a continuum of fractionalized excitations at intermediate fields, which are contrasted by conventional spin-wave excitations. The temperature evolution of these quasiparticles suggests the formation of bound states out of fractionalized excitations.
In the class of materials called spin liquids, a magnetically ordered state cannot be attained even at milliKelvin temperatures because of conflicting constraints on each spin (for e.g. from geometric or exchange frustration). The resulting quantum spin-liquid (QSL) state is currently of intense interest because it exhibits novel excitations as well as wave-function entanglement. The layered insulator $alpha$-RuCl$_3$ orders as a zigzag antiferromagnet below $sim$7 K in zero magnetic field. The zigzag order is destroyed when a magnetic field $bf H$ is applied parallel to the zigzag axis a. Within the field interval (7.3, 11) Tesla, there is growing evidence that a QSL state exists. Here we report the observation of oscillations in its thermal conductivity below 4 K. The oscillation amplitude is very large within the interval (7.3, 11) T and strongly suppressed on either side. Paradoxically, the oscillations are periodic in 1/emph{H}, analogous to quantum oscillations in metals, even though $alpha$-RuCl$_3$ is an excellent insulator with a gap of 1.9 eV. By tilting $bf H$ out of the plane, we find that the oscillation period is determined by the in-plane component $H_a$. As the temperature is raised above 0.5 K, the oscillation amplitude decreases exponentially. The decrease anticorrelates with the emergence above $sim$2 K of an anomalous planar thermal Hall conductivity measured with $bf Hparallel a$. To exclude extrinsic artifacts, we carried out several tests. The implications of the oscillations are discussed.
Heat transport mediated by Majorana edge modes in a magnetic insulator leads to a half-integer thermal quantum Hall conductance, which has recently been reported for the two-dimensional honeycomb material $alpha$-RuCl$_3$. While the conventional electronic Hall effect requires a perpendicular magnetic field, we find that this is not the case in $alpha$-RuCl$_3$. Strikingly, the thermal Hall plateau appears even for a magnetic field with no out-of-plane components. The field-angular variation of the quantized thermal Hall conductance has the same sign structure of the topological Chern number, which is either $pm$1, as the Majorana band structure of the pure Kitaev spin liquid. This observation of a half-integer anomalous thermal Hall effect firmly establishes that the Kitaev interaction is primarily responsible and that the non-Abelian topological order associated with fractionalization of the local magnetic moments persists even in the presence of non-Kitaev interactions in $alpha$-RuCl$_3$.
We report a muon spin rotation/relaxation ($mu$SR) study of single-crystalline samples of the $alpha$-RuCl$_3$ honeycomb magnet, which is presumed to be a model compound for the Kitaev-Heisenberg interaction. It is inferred from magnetic susceptibility and specific-heat measurements that the present samples exhibit successive magnetic transitions at different critical temperatures $T_{rm N}$ with decreasing temperature, eventually falling into the $T_{rm N}=7$ K antiferromagnetic (7 K) phase that has been observed in only single-crystalline specimens with the least stacking fault. Via $mu$SR measurements conducted under a zero external field, we show that such behavior originates from a phase separation induced by the honeycomb plane stacking fault, yielding multiple domains with different $T_{rm N}$s. We also perform $mu$SR measurements under a transverse field in the paramagnetic phase to identify the muon site from the muon-Ru hyperfine parameters. Based on a comparison of the experimental and calculated internal fields at the muon site for the two possible spin structures inferred from neutron diffraction data, we suggest a modulated zig-zag spin structure for the 7 K phase, with the amplitude of the ordered magnetic moment being significantly reduced from that expected for the orbital quenched spin-1/2 state.