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The combination of electronic correlation and spin-orbit coupling is thought to precipitate a variety of highly unusual electronic phases in solids, including topological and quantum spin liquid states. We report a Raman scattering study that provides evidence for unconventional excitations in $alpha$-RuCl$_3$, a spin-orbit coupled Mott insulator on the honeycomb lattice. In particular, our measurements reveal unusual magnetic scattering, typified by a broad continuum. The temperature dependence of this continuum is evident over a large scale compared to the magnetic ordering temperature, suggestive of frustrated magnetic interactions. This is confirmed through an analysis of the phonon linewidths, which show a related anomaly due to spin-phonon coupling. These observations are in line with theoretical expectations for the Heisenberg-Kitaev model and suggest that $alpha$-RuCl$_3$ may be close to a quantum spin liquid ground state.
We report on THz, infrared reflectivity and transmission experiments for wave numbers from 10 to 8000 cm$^{-1}$ ($sim$ 1 meV - 1 eV) and for temperatures from 5 to 295 K on the Kitaev candidate material {alpha}-RuCl$_3$. As reported earlier, the comp
We report measurements of optical absorption in the zig-zag antiferromagnet $alpha$-RuCl$_3$ as a function of temperature, $T$, magnetic field, $B$, and photon energy, $hbaromega$ in the range $sim$ 0.3 to 8.3 meV, using time-domain terahertz spectro
We present initial Raman spectroscopy experiments on exfoliated flakes of $alpha$-RuCl$_3$, from tens of nm thick down to single layers. Besides unexpectedly finding this material to be air stable, in the thinnest layers we observe the appearance wit
Fractionalized excitations are of considerable interest in recent condensed-matter physics. Fractionalization of the spin degrees of freedom into localized and itinerant Majorana fermions are predicted for the Kitaev spin liquid, an exactly solvable
Kitaev interactions underlying a quantum spin liquid have been long sought, but experimental data from which their strengths can be determined directly is still lacking. Here, by carrying out inelastic neutron scattering measurements on high-quality