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Robust intralayer antiferromagnetism and tricriticality in the van der Waals compound VBr3

Dávid Hovančík, Marie Kratochvílová, Tetiana Haidamak, Petr Doležal, Karel Carva, Anežka Bendová, Jan Prokleška, Petr Proschek, Martin Míšek, Denis I. Gorbunov, Jan Kotek, Vladimír Sechovský, and Jiří Pospíšil
Phys. Rev. B 108, 104416 – Published 21 September 2023
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Abstract

We studied magnetic states and phase transitions in the van der Waals antiferromagnet VBr3 experimentally by specific heat and magnetization measurements of single crystals in high magnetic fields and theoretically by the density functional theory calculations focused on exchange interactions. The magnetization behavior mimics Ising antiferromagnets with magnetic moments pointing out-of-plane due to strong uniaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy. The out-of-plane magnetic field induces a spin-flip metamagnetic transition of first-order type at low temperatures, while at higher temperatures, the transition becomes continuous. The first-order and continuous transition segments in the field-temperature phase diagram meet at a tricritical point. The magnetization response to the in-plane field manifests a continuous spin canting which is completed at the anisotropy field μ0HMA27T. At higher fields, the two magnetization curves above saturate at the same value of magnetic moment µsat1.2μB/f.u., which is much smaller than the spin-only (S=1) moment of the V3+ ion. The reduced moment can be explained by the existence of an unquenched orbital magnetic moment antiparallel to the spin. The orbital moment is a key ingredient of a mechanism responsible for the observed large anisotropy. The exact energy evaluation of possible magnetic structures shows that the intralayer zigzag antiferromagnetic (AFM) order is preferred, which renders the AFM ground state significantly more stable against the spin-flip transition than the other options. The calculations also predict that a minimal distortion of the Br ion sublattice causes a radical change of the orbital occupation in the ground state, connected with the formation of the orbital moment and the stability of magnetic order.

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  • Received 3 February 2023
  • Accepted 29 August 2023

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.108.104416

©2023 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Dávid Hovančík1, Marie Kratochvílová1, Tetiana Haidamak1, Petr Doležal1, Karel Carva1, Anežka Bendová1, Jan Prokleška1, Petr Proschek1, Martin Míšek2, Denis I. Gorbunov3, Jan Kotek4, Vladimír Sechovský1, and Jiří Pospíšil1,*

  • 1Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Department of Condensed Matter Physics, Ke Karlovu 5, 121 16 Prague 2, Czech Republic
  • 2Institute of Physics, Czech Academy of Sciences, Na Slovance 2, 182 21 Prague 8, Czech Republic
  • 3Hochfeld-Magnetlabor Dresden (HLD-EMFL), Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, 01328 Dresden, Germany
  • 4Department of Inorganic Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Hlavova 8, 128 40 Prague 2, Czech Republic

  • *jiri.pospisil@matfyz.cuni.cz

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Issue

Vol. 108, Iss. 10 — 1 September 2023

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