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Field-induced spin level crossings within a quasi-XY antiferromagnetic state in Ba$_{2}$FeSi$_{2}$O$_{7}$

Authors :
Lee, Minseong
Schoenemann, Rico
Zhang, Hao
Dahlbom, David
Jang, Tae-Hwan
Do, Seung-Hwan
Christianson, Andrew D.
Cheong, Sang-Wook
Park, Jae-Hoon
Brosha, Eric
Jaime, Marcelo
Barros, Kipton
Batista, Cristian D.
Zapf, Vivien S.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present a high-field study of the strongly anisotropic easy-plane square lattice $S$ = 2 quantum magnet Ba$_{2}$FeSi$_{2}$O$_{7}$. This compound is a rare high-spin antiferromagnetic system with very strong easy-plane anisotropy, such that the interplay between spin level crossings and antiferromagnetic order can be studied. We observe a magnetic field-induced spin level crossing occurring within an ordered state. This spin level crossing appears to preserve the magnetic symmetry while producing a non-monotonic dependence the order parameter magnitude. The resulting temperature-magnetic field phase diagram exhibits two dome-shaped regions of magnetic order overlapping around 30 T. The ground state of the lower-field dome is predominantly a linear combination of $| S^{z} = 0 \rangle$ and $ |S^{z} = 1 \rangle$ states, while the ground state of the higher-field dome can be approximated by a linear combination of $| S^{z} = 1 \rangle $ and $ | S^{z} = 2\rangle$ states. At 30 T, where the spin levels cross, the magnetization exhibits a slanted plateau, {\color {black}the magnetocaloric effect shows a broad hump, and the electric polarization shows a weak slope change}. We determined the detailed magnetic phase boundaries and the spin level crossings using measurements of magnetization, electric polarization, and the magnetocaloric effect in pulsed magnetic fields to 60 T. We calculate these properties using a mean field theory based on direct products of SU(5) coherent states and find good agreement. Finally, we measure and calculate the magnetically-induced electric polarization that reflects magnetic ordering and spin level crossings. This multiferroic behavior provides another avenue for detecting phase boundaries and symmetry changes.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2210.14323
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.107.144427