Absence of Jahn–Teller transition in the hexagonal Ba₃CuSb₂O₉ single crystal

With decreasing temperature, liquids generally freeze into a solid state, losing entropy in the process. However, exceptions to this trend exist, such as quantum liquids, which may remain unfrozen down to absolute zero owing to strong quantum entanglement effects that stabilize a disordered state wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2015-07, Vol.112 (30), p.9305-9309
Hauptverfasser: Katayama, Naoyuki, Kimura, Kenta, Han, Yibo, Nasu, Joji, Drichko, Natalia, Nakanishi, Yoshiki, Halim, Mario, Ishiguro, Yuki, Satake, Ryuta, Nishibori, Eiji, Yoshizawa, Masahito, Nakano, Takehito, Nozue, Yasuo, Wakabayashi, Yusuke, Ishihara, Sumio, Hagiwara, Masayuki, Sawa, Hiroshi, Nakatsuji, Satoru
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:With decreasing temperature, liquids generally freeze into a solid state, losing entropy in the process. However, exceptions to this trend exist, such as quantum liquids, which may remain unfrozen down to absolute zero owing to strong quantum entanglement effects that stabilize a disordered state with zero entropy. Examples of such liquids include Bose–Einstein condensation of cold atoms, superconductivity, quantum Hall state of electron systems, and quantum spin liquid state in the frustrated magnets. Moreover, recent studies have clarified the possibility of another exotic quantum liquid state based on the spin–orbital entanglement in FeSc₂S₄. To confirm this exotic ground state, experiments based on single-crystalline samples are essential. However, no such single-crystal study has been reported to date. Here, we report, to our knowledge, the first single-crystal study on the spin–orbital liquid candidate, 6H-Ba₃CuSb₂O₉, and we have confirmed the absence of an orbital frozen state. In strongly correlated electron systems, orbital ordering usually appears at high temperatures in a process accompanied by a lattice deformation, called a static Jahn–Teller distortion. By combining synchrotron X-ray diffraction, electron spin resonance, Raman spectroscopy, and ultrasound measurements, we find that the static Jahn–Teller distortion is absent in the present material, which indicates that orbital ordering is suppressed down to the lowest temperatures measured. We discuss how such an unusual feature is realized with the help of spin degree of freedom, leading to a spin–orbital entangled quantum liquid state.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1508941112