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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Huang, Chien-Lung"

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    Diffusive excitonic bands from frustrated triangular sublattice in a singlet-ground-state system
    (Springer Nature, 2023) Gao, Bin; Chen, Tong; Wu, Xiao-Chuan; Flynn, Michael; Duan, Chunruo; Chen, Lebing; Huang, Chien-Lung; Liebman, Jesse; Li, Shuyi; Ye, Feng; Stone, Matthew B.; Podlesnyak, Andrey; Abernathy, Douglas L.; Adroja, Devashibhai T.; Duc Le, Manh; Huang, Qingzhen; Nevidomskyy, Andriy H.; Morosan, Emilia; Balents, Leon; Dai, Pengcheng
    Magnetic order in most materials occurs when magnetic ions with finite moments arrange in a particular pattern below the ordering temperature. Intriguingly, if the crystal electric field (CEF) effect results in a spin-singlet ground state, a magnetic order can still occur due to the exchange interactions between neighboring ions admixing the excited CEF levels. The magnetic excitations in such a state are spin excitons generally dispersionless in reciprocal space. Here we use neutron scattering to study stoichiometric Ni2Mo3O8, where Ni2+ ions form a bipartite honeycomb lattice comprised of two triangular lattices, with ions subject to the tetrahedral and octahedral crystalline environment, respectively. We find that in both types of ions, the CEF excitations have nonmagnetic singlet ground states, yet the material has magnetic order. Furthermore, CEF spin excitons from the tetrahedral sites form a dispersive diffusive pattern around the Brillouin zone boundary, likely due to spin entanglement and geometric frustrations.
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    Magnetic field effects in an octupolar quantum spin liquid candidate
    (American Physical Society, 2022) Gao, Bin; Chen, Tong; Yan, Han; Duan, Chunruo; Huang, Chien-Lung; Yao, Xu Ping; Ye, Feng; Balz, Christian; Stewart, J. Ross; Nakajima, Kenji; Ohira-Kawamura, Seiko; Xu, Guangyong; Xu, Xianghan; Cheong, Sang-Wook; Morosan, Emilia; Nevidomskyy, Andriy H.; Chen, Gang; Dai, Pengcheng
    Quantum spin liquid (QSL) is a disordered state of quantum-mechanically entangled spins commonly arising from frustrated magnetic dipolar interactions. However, QSL in some pyrochlore magnets can also come from frustrated magnetic octupolar interactions. Although the key signature for both dipolar and octupolar interaction-driven QSL is the presence of a spin excitation continuum (spinons) arising from the spin quantum number fractionalization, an external magnetic field-induced ferromagnetic order will transform the spinons into conventional spin waves in a dipolar QSL. By contrast, in an octupole QSL, the spin waves carry octupole moments that do not couple, in the leading order, to an external magnetic field or to neutron moments but will contribute to the field dependence of the heat capacity. Here we use neutron scattering to show that the application of a large external magnetic field to Ce2Zr2O7, an octupolar QSL candidate, induces an Anderson-Higgs transition by condensing the spinons into a static ferromagnetic ordered state with octupolar spin waves invisible to neutrons but contributing to the heat capacity. Our theoretical calculations also provide a microscopic, qualitative understanding for the presence of octupole scattering at large wave vectors in Ce2Sn2O7 pyrochlore, and its absence in Ce2Zr2O7. Therefore, our results identify Ce2Zr2O7 as a strong candidate for an octupolar U(1) QSL, establishing that frustrated magnetic octupolar interactions are responsible for QSL properties in Ce-based pyrochlore magnets.
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    Metal-to-insulator transition in Pt-doped TiSe 2 driven by emergent network of narrow transport channels
    (Springer Nature, 2021) Lee, Kyungmin; Choe, Jesse; Iaia, Davide; Li, Juqiang; Zhao, Junjing; Shi, Ming; Ma, Junzhang; Yao, Mengyu; Wang, Zhenyu; Huang, Chien-Lung; Ochi, Masayuki; Arita, Ryotaro; Chatterjee, Utpal; Morosan, Emilia; Madhavan, Vidya; Trivedi, Nandini
    Metal-to-insulator transitions (MIT) can be driven by a number of different mechanisms, each resulting in a different type of insulator—Change in chemical potential can induce a transition from a metal to a band insulator; strong correlations can drive a metal into a Mott insulator with an energy gap; an Anderson transition, on the other hand, due to disorder leads to a localized insulator without a gap in the spectrum. Here, we report the discovery of an alternative route for MIT driven by the creation of a network of narrow channels. Transport data on Pt substituted for Ti in 1T-TiSe2 shows a dramatic increase of resistivity by five orders of magnitude for few % of Pt substitution, with a power-law dependence of the temperature-dependent resistivity ρ(T). Our scanning tunneling microscopy data show that Pt induces an irregular network of nanometer-thick domain walls (DWs) of charge density wave (CDW) order, which pull charge carriers out of the bulk and into the DWs. While the CDW domains are gapped, the charges confined to the narrow DWs interact strongly, with pseudogap-like suppression in the local density of states, even when they were weakly interacting in the bulk, and scatter at the DW network interconnects thereby generating the highly resistive state. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy spectra exhibit pseudogap behavior corroborating the spatial coexistence of gapped domains and narrow domain walls with excess charge carriers.
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    Quantum simulation of an extended Dicke model with a magnetic solid
    (Springer Nature, 2024) Marquez Peraca, Nicolas; Li, Xinwei; Moya, Jaime M.; Hayashida, Kenji; Kim, Dasom; Ma, Xiaoxuan; Neubauer, Kelly J.; Fallas Padilla, Diego; Huang, Chien-Lung; Dai, Pengcheng; Nevidomskyy, Andriy H.; Pu, Han; Morosan, Emilia; Cao, Shixun; Bamba, Motoaki; Kono, Junichiro
    The Dicke model describes the cooperative interaction of an ensemble of two-level atoms with a single-mode photonic field and exhibits a quantum phase transition as a function of light–matter coupling strength. Extending this model by incorporating short-range atom–atom interactions makes the problem intractable but is expected to produce new physical phenomena and phases. Here, we simulate such an extended Dicke model using a crystal of ErFeO3, where the role of atoms (photons) is played by Er3+ spins (Fe3+ magnons). Through terahertz spectroscopy and magnetocaloric effect measurements as a function of temperature and magnetic field, we demonstrated the existence of a novel atomically ordered phase in addition to the superradiant and normal phases that are expected from the standard Dicke model. Further, we elucidated the nature of the phase boundaries in the temperature–magnetic-field phase diagram, identifying both first-order and second-order phase transitions. These results lay the foundation for studying multiatomic quantum optics models using well-characterized many-body solid-state systems.
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