Monopolar and dipolar relaxation in spin ice Ho2Ti2O7.
Yishu WangT ReederY KarakiJ KindervaterT HalloranNicholas MaliszewskyjYiming QiuJose A Rodriguez-RiveraS GladchenkoS M KoohpayehSatoru NakatsujiCollin L BroholmPublished in: Science advances (2021)
Ferromagnetically interacting Ising spins on the pyrochlore lattice of corner-sharing tetrahedra form a highly degenerate manifold of low-energy states. A spin flip relative to this "spin-ice" manifold can fractionalize into two oppositely charged magnetic monopoles with effective Coulomb interactions. To understand this process, we have probed the low-temperature magnetic response of spin ice to time-varying magnetic fields through stroboscopic neutron scattering and SQUID magnetometry on a new class of ultrapure Ho2Ti2O7 crystals. Covering almost 10 decades of time scales with atomic-scale spatial resolution, the experiments resolve apparent discrepancies between prior measurements on more disordered crystals and reveal a thermal crossover between distinct relaxation processes. Magnetic relaxation at low temperatures is associated with monopole motion through the spin-ice vacuum, while at elevated temperatures, relaxation occurs through reorientation of increasingly spin-like monopolar bound states. Spin fractionalization is thus directly manifest in the relaxation dynamics of spin ice.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- transition metal
- molecularly imprinted
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics
- computed tomography
- randomized controlled trial
- magnetic resonance imaging
- clinical trial
- gene expression
- genome wide
- single cell
- healthcare
- health information
- mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography