Successive orthorhombic distortions in Kagome metals
ORAL
Abstract
A hallmark of correlated electron systems is an ordering of charge, orbital, and spin degrees of freedom, as well as their strong interactions. Kagome metals serve as a representative example, especially highlighted by the recent discovery of 3Q charge density wave (CDW) and loop-current orders. Since CDWs are highly sensitive to details of the Fermi surface, various magnetic or structural instabilities compete in high-symmetry settings such as in hexagonal Kagome metals.
Here, we present our structural study on Ruthenium-based Kagome metals, including the first successful growth of single crystals. In synchrotron X-ray diffraction, we observe that the parent hexagonal structure transitions into a primitive orthorhombic structure via a critical regime of a short-range ordered state. This behavior is consistent with structural modeling—our optical birefringence measurements further evidence the orthorhombic distortion. As a consequence, this class of Kagome metals exhibits non-collinear and non-coplanar spin textures at low temperatures due to staggered single-ion anisotropy, likely arising from quadrupolar order. Our work highlights versatile structural instabilities in Kagome metals, offering a new platform to explore the intertwined evolution of lattice, orbital, and spin degrees of freedom.
Here, we present our structural study on Ruthenium-based Kagome metals, including the first successful growth of single crystals. In synchrotron X-ray diffraction, we observe that the parent hexagonal structure transitions into a primitive orthorhombic structure via a critical regime of a short-range ordered state. This behavior is consistent with structural modeling—our optical birefringence measurements further evidence the orthorhombic distortion. As a consequence, this class of Kagome metals exhibits non-collinear and non-coplanar spin textures at low temperatures due to staggered single-ion anisotropy, likely arising from quadrupolar order. Our work highlights versatile structural instabilities in Kagome metals, offering a new platform to explore the intertwined evolution of lattice, orbital, and spin degrees of freedom.
*This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Nos. JP22K20348, JP23H05431, JP23K13057, JP24H01607, and JP24H01604, JST CREST Grant Nos. JPMJCR1874 and JPMJCR20T1 (Japan), and by JST FOREST Grant No. JPMJFR2238 (Japan).
–
Presenters
-
Ryo Misawa
- The University of Tokyo