2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session X4: Quantum Order in Chiral Magnets
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 9, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: Korbel 2B-3B
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Chandra Varma, University of California, Riverside
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.X4.4
Abstract: X4.00004 : Investigation of the Metallic State in Cubic FeGe beyond its Quantum Phase Transition
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Heribert Wilhelm
(Diamond Light Source, Chilton, Didcot, OX11 0DE, Oxfordshire)
FeGe and MnSi are prominent examples where the
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction causes a modulation of the
ferromagnetic structure as a consequence of the lack of
inversion symmetry in the $B20$ structure (space group $P2_13
$). In FeGe, helimagnetism sets in through a first order phase
transition at $T_{\rm C}=280\,$K with a saturated moment of $m=1
\mu_B$ per Fe atom. The helical modulation has a period of
about $700\,$\AA\ and propagates along the spiral propagation
vector ${\bf k} \parallel [1 0 0]$. It alters its direction to
${\bf k}\parallel [1 1 1]$ at $T_2\approx 211-245\,$K without a
change in the period. In MnSi, however, the helical order
occurs below $T_{\rm C}=29\,$K. The modulation has a wavelength
of $175\,$\AA\ and the ordered moments of about $m=0.4\,\mu_B$
per Mn atom are perpendicular to ${\bf k}\parallel [1 1 1]$. It
is well established that the second order phase transition is
driven first order for a sufficiently weak magnetic interaction
close to the critical pressure, $p_{\rm c}=1.46\,$GPa.
In light of these structural and magnetic similarities between
FeGe and MnSi, a volume compression in FeGe could tune its
$T_C$ to zero temperature with the chance to reveal peculiar
electronic ground state properties at the verge of the magnetic
order. Indeed, the electrical resistivity measurements, $\rho(T)
$, show a suppression of the helical order at $p_c\approx 19
\,$GPa. The strong deviations from a Fermi-liquid behavior in a
wide pressure range above $p_c$ suggest that the suppression of
$T_C$ disagrees with the standard notion of a quantum critical
phase transition. Our band-structure calculations suggest that
disorder due to zero-point motion is strong enough to close the
narrow gap expected for compressed FeGe, stabilizing a new
magnetic ground state above $p_c$. An anomaly observed at $T_X$
in the $\rho(T)$ curves recorded above $p_c$ might be related
to this magnetic phase. The isothermal structural data at
low temperature revealed a discontinuous change in the pressure
dependence of the shortest Fe-Ge interatomic distance close to
the $T_C(p)$ phase line. The $(T,V)$ phase diagram will be
discussed and the connection with MnSi and the semiconducting
properties of FeSi will be addressed.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.X4.4