The interplay of structural, orbital, charge, and spin degrees of freedom is at the heart of many emergent phenomena, including superconductivity. Unraveling the underlying forces of such novel phases is a great challenge because it not only requires understanding each of these degrees of freedom, it also involves accounting for the interplay between them. Cerium-based heavy fermion compounds are an ideal playground for investigating these interdependencies, and we present evidence for a correlation between orbital anisotropy and the ground states in a representative family of materials. We have measured the 4f crystal-electric field ground-state wave functions of the strongly correlated materials CeRh1-xIrxIn5 with great accuracy using linear polarization-dependent soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy. These measurements show that these wave functions correlate with the ground-state properties of the substitution series, which covers long-range antiferromagnetic order, unconventional superconductivity, and coexistence of these two states.
CITATION STYLE
Willers, T., Strigari, F., Hu, Z., Sessi, V., Brookes, N. B., Bauer, E. D., … Severing, A. (2015). Correlation between ground state and orbital anisotropy in heavy fermion materials. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(8), 2384–2388. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1415657112
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