High-entropy magnetism of murunskite
Murunskite (K$_2$FeCu$_3$S$_4$) is a bridging compound between the only two known families of high-temperature superconductors. It is a semiconductor like the parent compounds of cuprates, yet isostructural to metallic iron-pnictides. Moreover, like both families, it has an antiferromagnetic (AF)-li...
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Zusammenfassung: | Murunskite (K$_2$FeCu$_3$S$_4$) is a bridging compound between the only two
known families of high-temperature superconductors. It is a semiconductor like
the parent compounds of cuprates, yet isostructural to metallic iron-pnictides.
Moreover, like both families, it has an antiferromagnetic (AF)-like response
with an ordered phase occurring below $\approx$ 100 K. Through comprehensive
neutron, M\"ossbauer, and XPS measurements on single crystals, we unveil AF
with a nearly commensurate quarter-zone wave vector. Intriguingly, the only
identifiable magnetic atoms, iron, are randomly distributed over one-quarter of
available crystallographic sites in 2D planes, while the remaining sites are
occupied by closed-shell copper. Notably, any interpretation in terms of a
spin-density wave is challenging, in contrast to the metallic iron-pnictides
where Fermi-surface nesting can occur. Our findings align with a
disordered-alloy picture featuring magnetic interactions up to second
neighbors. Moreover, in the paramagnetic state, iron ions are either in
Fe$^{3+}$ or Fe$^{2+}$ oxidation states, associated with two distinct
paramagnetic sites identified by M\"ossbauer spectroscopy. Upon decreasing the
temperature below the appearance of magnetic interactions, these two signals
merge completely into a third, implying an orbital transition. It completes the
cascade of (local) transitions that transform iron atoms from fully orbitally
and magnetically disordered to homogeneously ordered in inverse space, but
still randomly distributed in real space. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.17108 |