Disorder-induced local strain distribution in Y-substituted TmVO4
We report an investigation of the effect of substitution of Y for Tm in Tm1-xYxVO4 via low-temperature heat capacity measurements, with the yttrium content x varying from 0 to 0.997. Because the Tm ions support a local quadrupolar (nematic) moment, they act as reporters of the local strain state in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physical review. B 2024-06, Vol.109 (22) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We report an investigation of the effect of substitution of Y for Tm in Tm1-xYxVO4 via low-temperature heat capacity measurements, with the yttrium content x varying from 0 to 0.997. Because the Tm ions support a local quadrupolar (nematic) moment, they act as reporters of the local strain state in the material, with the splitting of the ion's non-Kramers crystal field ground state proportional to the quadrature sum of the in-plane tetragonal symmetry-breaking transverse and longitudinal strains experienced by each ion individually. Analysis of the heat capacity, therefore, provides detailed insights into the distribution of local strains that arise as a consequence of the chemical substitution. These local strains suppress long-range quadrupole order for x > 0.22, and result in a broad Schottky-like feature for higher concentrations. Heat capacity data are compared to expectations for a distribution of uncorrelated (random) strains. For dilute Tm concentrations, the heat capacity cannot be accounted for by randomly distributed strains, demonstrating the presence of significant strain correlations between sites. For intermediate Tm concentrations, these correlations must still exist, but the data cannot be distinguished from that which would be obtained from a two-dimensional Gaussian distribution. The crossover between these limits is discussed in terms of the interplay of key lengthscales in the substituted material. Furthermore, the central result of this work, namely that local strains arising from chemical substitution are not uncorrelated, has implications for the range of validity of theoretical models based on random effective fields that are used to describe such chemically substituted materials, particularly when electronic nematic correlations are present. |
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ISSN: | 2469-9950 |
DOI: | 10.1103/PhysRevB.109.224201 |