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Received 15 Aug 2016 | Accepted 16 Feb 2017 | Published 13 Apr 2017
In many layered metals, coherent propagation of electronic excitations is often conned to the highly conducting planes. While strong electron correlations and/or proximity to an ordered phase are believed to be the drivers of this electron connement, it is still not known what triggers the loss of interlayer coherence in a number of layered systems with strong magnetic uctuations, such as cuprates. Here, we show that a denitive signature of interlayer coherence in the metallic-layered triangular antiferromagnet PdCrO2 vanishes at the Nel transition temperature. Comparison with the relevant energy scales and with the isostructural non-magnetic PdCoO2 reveals that the interlayer incoherence is driven by the growth of short-range magnetic uctuations. This establishes a connection between long-range order and interlayer coherence in PdCrO2 and suggests that in many other low-dimensional conductors, incoherent interlayer transport also arises from the strong interaction between the (tunnelling) electrons and uctuations of some underlying order.
1 High Field Magnet Laboratory (HFML-EMFL), Faculty of Science, Radboud University, Toernooiveld 7, 6525ED Nijmegen, The Netherlands. 2 Institute of Molecules and Materials, Faculty of Science, Radboud University, 6525 AJ Nijmegen, The Netherlands. 3 Oxford Instruments NanoScience, Tubney Woods, Abingdon, Oxfordshire OX13 5QX, UK. 4 Dresden High Magnetic Field Laboratory (HLD-EMFL), Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, 01328 Dresden, Germany. 5 Department of Physics, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Tokyo 192-0397, Japan. 6 Department of Energy and Hydrocarbon Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto 615-8510, Japan. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to S.G. (email:mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ) or to N.E.H. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ).
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DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15001 OPEN
Simultaneous loss of interlayer coherence and long-range magnetism in quasi-two-dimensional PdCrO2
S. Ghannadzadeh1,2,3, S. Licciardello1,2, S. Arsenijevi1,2,4, P. Robinson1,2, H. Takatsu5,6, M.I. Katsnelson2
& N.E. Hussey1,2
ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15001
Many correlated metals, such as cuprates, ruthenates and iron-based superconductors have highly anisotropic electronic properties, often resulting in an interlayer
conductivity that is incoherent, even at low temperatures. Despite intense theoretical and experimental investigation, the origin of this incoherence is unknown, though it is likely due to some combination of strong electron correlations, the lamellar crystalline structure and/or proximity to an ordered phase. In quasi-two-dimensional (Q2D) systems that are both metallic and magnetic, the (weak) electronic coupling between the conducting planes can also inuence the interlayer exchange coupling J0.
Although the effect of electronic coupling on the magnetic orderingfor example via the RudermanKittelKasuyaYosida (RKKY) interaction14has been widely studied5,6, there has been very little experimental exploration of the effect of magnetism itself on the interlayer electronic coupling and on the electronic dimensionality.
PdCrO2 is a rare example of a highly metallic 2D triangular antiferromagnet. As shown in Fig. 1a, PdCrO2 has a delafossite structure, consisting of stacked layers of highly conducting Pd layers sandwiched between planes of Mott-insulating CrO2 (refs 7,8). The
Cr ions have a localized spin of 3/2 and are highly frustrated, forming a non-coplanar and non-collinear antiferromagnetic 120 helical structure at TN 37.5 K (refs 7,912). Quantum
oscillation8,13 and angle-resolved photoemission studies14 have mapped out the Fermi surface (FS) of PdCrO2. At T4TN, the FS consists of a single six-fold symmetric electron pocket centered at G and is mostly derived from the 4d9 electrons15. At TN, band-folding due to the Cr3 spin ordering leads to formation of a
3
p
p
3
supercell and results in FS reconstruction into the more complex FS, indicating a strong coupling between the magnetism and the conduction electrons. A recent magnetothermopower study also revealed a strong interaction between the 4d9 electrons and the short-range spin correlations persisting well above TN (ref. 10).
Here we report the observation that the interlayer coherence of the Pd electrons is lost upon transition from the magnetically ordered to the paramagnetic regime above TN. Through high-eld angle-dependent magnetoresistance (ADMR) measurements at temperatures above and below TN, we chart the evolution of the so-called Hanasaki coherence peakone of the most denitive and sensitive probes of electronic coherence1621as a function of temperature. We show that the coherence peak is fully suppressed just above TN, implying a close correlation between
the magnetic order on the Cr sites and the coherence of the Pd electronic states. This nding raises the question of whether it is the interlayer electron coherence that renormalizes J0 and hence
TN, or whether it is the melting of the magnetism that induces a dimensional crossover in the conduction electrons. We extract the interlayer hopping parameter t? from the Hanasaki peak, and
through comparison with the isostructural non-magnetic PdCoO2, we argue that it is the loss of long-range magnetic order that ultimately decouples electronically the conducting planes.
ResultsAngle-dependent magnetoresistance. Figure 2b shows the c-axis magnetoresistance rc(y) of PdCrO2 at T 4.2 K in magnetic
elds of 15 and 30 T as the sample is rotated around the polar axis, from the eld perpendicular (y 0, H||[001]) to parallel
(y 90, H||[110]) to the conduction planes. The data show a
broad near-sinusoidal background with a minimum at y 0 (the
Lorentz force-free conguration), on which is superimposed a series of complex ADMR oscillations (AMROs). These peaks, also known as Yamaji oscillations, occur at certain orientations of the magnetic eld whenever the interplane electron velocity, when averaged over its corresponding cyclotron orbit22, is minimized23. The angular location of these peaks is governed by the relation dkjjF tan y p n 1=4
for each FS pocket, where n is an integer,
d 6.03 is the interplanar distance and kjjF is the projection of
the Fermi wave-number on the conducting plane23. While the multi-component nature of the FS in PdCrO2 leads to some ambiguity when assigning individual peaks to a specic pocket, some peaks can still be identied. As an example, the series of peaks indicated by arrows in Fig. 2b correspond to a pocket of radius kjjF 0:573 1 (see inset of Fig. 2b), consistent with that
of the g pocket identied by Shubnikovde Haas oscillations8,13. The presence of polar AMRO, however, is not by itself evidence for a fully coherent three-dimensional (3D) FS (ref. 17).
Temperature dependence of the interlayer coherence peak. We turn now to the most dominant feature of the ADMR data, namely the sharp peak observed when the eld is applied exactly parallel to the conducting planes (y 90). This peak is unam
biguously resolved at elds as low as 10 T (see Supplementary Fig. 2b), with the variation in eld having no effect on the width
0.50
a b c
Pd
Cr
O
c (m cm)
0.20
c
0.00
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 Temperature (K)
Figure 1 | Magnetic ordering in PdCrO2. (a) Crystal structure of PdCrO2, with lattice parameters a b 2.930 and c 18.087 (ref. 7). The green, blue
and red spheres represent the Pd, O and Cr atoms, respectively. The red-shaded planes represent the sides of the edge-shared CrO6 octahedra. (b) One of the possible solutions for magnetic structure of the antiferromagnetically ordered phase below TN 37.5 K, showing a non-coplanar spin structure9.
The arrows represent the Cr spins, with arrows of the same color representing spins in the same spin sublattice group (see ref. 9 for details). For clarity only the Cr atoms are shown. (c) The temperature dependence of the interlayer c-axis resistivity rc, which shows a sub-linear temperature dependence in the paramagnetic regime with a sharp cusp at TN, resulting in a rc(T) that rises faster than T2 in the FS reconstructed phase. Inset: The derivative drc/dT of the same resistivity curve, highlighting the sharp peak at the transition temperature. The shaded and unshaded regions indicate the coherent and incoherent regimes, respectively. Crystallographic drawings produced using VESTA37.
b
a
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a
b
1.50
I z
B
1.25
1.00
0.75
0.50
0.25
30
c (m cm)
V
y
x
60 70 80 90 100
0 10 20 30 40 50
()
()
c d
0.55
0.50
0.45
0.40
0.35
0.30
0.25
0.20
0.15
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
25
20
15
10
5
86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94
c (m cm)
c (m cm)
()
Figure 2 | ADMR at high elds. (a) Schematic diagram of the four-contact setup used to measure c-axis resistivity, showing the denition of the polar (y) and azimuthal (f) angles. (b) Evolution of rc during a polar rotation at 15 T (red line) and 30 T (blue line), at 4.2 K. The direction of the applied eld at 0
and 90 are given. The top right inset shows tan y for the peaks indicated by the arrows, forming a straight line as expected for Yamaji oscillations. Fits (dashed line in the inset) to this give kf 0.57(3) 1, consistent with that found for the g orbits from quantum oscillation measurements13. The left inset
is a schematic showing the coherent FS orbits that are formed when the eld is applied parallel to the crystal planes. (c,d) The reduction in the amplitude of the c-axis coherence peak at y 90 as a function of temperature for PdCrO2 (m0H 30 T) and for its non-magnetic isostructural analogue PdCoO2
(m0H 35 T)28. For clarity, the PdCrO2 data is plotted as drc rc(y) rc(y 0). The 4.2 K data for PdCrO2 have been scaled by 0.43. The PdCoO2 data
are reproduced with kind permission from Kikugawa et al.28
of the peak, only its amplitude. First discussed in depth by Hanasaki et al.16, the peak arises due to formation of closed orbits parallel to the conducting planes in a warped FS column, as shown schematically in the inset of Fig. 2b (Note that although open orbits can also contribute to the interlayer conductivity for in-plane elds, they do not lead to a peak in the resistance19). Thus, in contrast to polar AMRO, the Hanasaki peak is a direct signature of interlayer coherence and implies the existence of a FS that extends in all three dimensions1621,24.
Figure 2c shows the evolution of the Hanasaki peak as the temperature is raised through the magnetic transition. (It should be stressed that the magnetic eld has a negligible effect on the value of TN, at least at the eld strengths employed in this study8).
With increasing temperature, the amplitude of the coherence peak gradually diminishes, until eventually, only the broad sinusoidal background is visible. In order to follow its evolution more closely, we plot in Fig. 3a the temperature dependence of drK(y)/dy, where rK(y) is the Kohler-scaled resistivity rc(y)/rc,0 with rc,0 being the zero-eld c-axis resistivity for that particular temperature. In this plot, a change in gradient from positive to negative at 90 indicates the presence of the coherence peak (as explained in the Supplementary Note 2, a near-sinusoidal
background has been subtracted rst from the raw data before differentiation). A change in gradient is indeed seen for all temperatures below TN, but not at 40, 42 or 44 K. The sharpness of the peak can be quantied by looking at the magnitude of the second-derivative of rK(y). This quantity, plotted in Fig. 3b, is found to decrease almost linearly with increasing temperature, reaching zero just above TN 37.5 K. In other words, the
coherence peak is found to be fully suppressed above the magnetic ordering temperature, implying that the c-axis FS warping becomes ill-dened and the original 3D FS is transformed into a stack of 2D sheets (see insets of Fig. 3b).
DiscussionThe near-coincidence of the loss of the Hanasaki peak and TN raises the intriguing conundrum of whether it is the change in electronic coherence which determines the value of TN in
PdCrO2, or conversely, if it is the loss of long-range order at TN that causes the interlayer hopping to become incoherent. In quasi-1D PrBa2Cu4O8, a eld-induced reduction in the dimensionality of the chain carriers drives a spinop transition of the local moments on the Pr sites25. There, the persistence of the
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15001
a
0.1
1 )
d K/d (
0.0
0.1
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.0
88 90
()
92
b
2 )
2 (
2 K /d
d
0.1
30 35
Temperature (K)
40 45
Figure 3 | Loss of electronic coherence at TN. (a) Evolution of drK/dy as a function of the polar angle for a range of temperatures above and below TN.
The 4.2 K curve is scaled by 0.03. (b) |d2rK/dy2| at y 90, showing the
reduction in the sharpness of the coherence peak as temperature is increased. The shaded and unshaded backgrounds indicate the coherent and incoherent regimes, respectively. The temperature error bar is given by the temperature drift during the rotation, while the |d2rK/dy2| error bar is given by the maximum uncertainty introduced in the peak amplitude due to the necessary smoothing of the drK/dy curve. The error bars are not shown if they are smaller than the data points. In both gures the broad sinusoidal background was subtracted prior to differentiation, as described in the Supplementary Note 2. Inset: representation of a 3D FS in the coherent regime (c), and a Fermi surface that is only dened in two-dimensions in the incoherent regime (d).
dimensional crossover beyond TN (ref. 26) conrms its key role in the spinop transition, the latter being attributed to a change in the effective RKKY interaction JRKKY induced by the corresponding reduction in t? of the mediating chain carriers.
In PdCrO2, a similar renormalization of JRKKY (via t?) could also
act to destabilize the long-range order and thereby renormalize TN to a value far below the CurieWeiss temperature YW.
To determine which is the dominant effect in PdCrO2, we need
to compare rst the energy scales that dene the interlayer
coherence. Interlayer conductivity is assumed to become incoherent once the interlayer hopping integral t? becomes less
than other relevant energy scales, such as temperature kBT (in
which case, the c-axis warping becomes ill-dened) or the intraplanar scattering rate :/t (in which case, the individual carriers are scattered many times within the plane before tunnelling to an adjacent plane)17,27. The interlayer transfer integral can be obtained from the ADMR via the relation
t?
2kF
4dm Dy; 1
where m* is the effective mass and Dy is the full width of the coherence peak as measured from its base16. Before comparing the various energy scales in PdCrO2, we rst consider the case of isostructural PdCoO2, which has an identical crystal structure and Fermiology to PdCrO2 (above TN) but has a non-magnetic ground state. The temperature evolution of the Hanasaki coherence peak in PdCoO2 is shown in Fig. 2d (ref. 28). From its width, we obtain t?E17 meV 200 K, in good agreement with
the value ( 21 meV) obtained from a recent quantum oscillation
study15. The coherence peak in PdCoO2 persists to temperatures of order 90 K, consistent with these estimates for t?. For PdCrO2,
we nd Dy 8.0(5), and assuming that the coherence peak is
dominated by the largest non-breakdown orbital (g) for which kF 0.57(3) 1 and m* 1.37(2)me (ref. 13), we obtain
t?E18(1) meV 210(20) K, that is, a very similar magnitude to
that found in PdCoO2, as reected in their comparable resistive anisotropies. Thus, despite the similarity in the t? magnitudes,
the coherence peak in PdCrO2 vanishes at a signicantly lower temperature.
We can also estimate :/t just below TN from the magnitude of the in-plane resistivity and nd :/t(TN)E0.8(1) meV (see Supplementary Note 3). Correspondingly, octE3 at 30 T and 37.5 K. In the quasi-2D organic superconductor k-(ET)2Cu(NCS)2, the coherence peak itself was found to survive down to oct values of order 1 (ref. 24), while in the high-Tc cuprate Tl2Ba2CuO6 d, polar AMRO have been observed down
to oct 0:15 (ref. 29). More concretely, it is instructive to
compare directly the absolute magnitude of the resistivity in PdCrO2 and in PdCoO2 at the corresponding temperatures where the Hanasaki peak is found to vanish. Given that the carrier densities (and their effective masses B1.5me) are essentially identical above 37.5 K (refs 13,15), the ratio of their resistivities should correspond to the ratio of their scattering rates. According to Hicks et al.13, the resistivity in PdCrO2 at TN is a factor of two larger than that of PdCoO2 at 90 K, implying that the oct value in PdCrO2 when the Hanasaki peak vanishes is only half the corresponding value in PdCoO2. Consequently, the suppression of the Hanasaki peak does not appear to be correlated with the carrier lifetime reaching a certain threshold. Moreover, given that both kBT and :/t are almost one order of magnitude smaller than t? at T TN, there is no obvious reason a priori why the
coherence peak in PdCrO2 should vanish beyond TN. Therefore we conclude that it is not the change in electronic coherence which determines the value of TN in PdCrO2, but that conversely, it is the loss of long-range magnetic order that induces the dimensional crossover of the conduction electrons and causes the interlayer hopping to become incoherent.
PdCrO2 is an anisotropic-layered antiferromagnet with an interlayer exchange interaction J0 that is much smaller than the in-plane interaction J. This leads to the existence of a broad temperature range above TN, TNoToYWE500 K within which
short-range antiferromagnetic uctuations persist7,9,11. Such a state can be described via self-consistent spin-wave theory30. Analysis of the corresponding equations (see equations (2023) of ref. 30) shows that whereas the in-plane correlation length
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15001 ARTICLE
remains much larger than interatomic distance up to T YW, the
interplane correlation length xc becomes comparable to the c-axis lattice spacing d at a much reduced temperature within TN/YW of
the Nel ordering temperature, TTN 1
TN YW
1ln J=J0 : 2
Once xcod, the magnetic coupling becomes strongly uctuating. For PdCrO2 the estimate of the right-hand side is o0.1. A relatively compact explicit expression can be found in the limit of classical spins (which only effects numerical factors of the order of one):
TTN 1
1ln J=J0 ln 1 k
1
!
r
k2 2
k2
4
; 3
where k d/xc. Note that this expression is meaningful only for
ko1, that is, very close to TN. The motion of electrons in an in-plane magnetic eld becomes incoherent at an even smaller k d=rc oo 1 where rc is the cyclotron radius along the c axis.
This implies that enhanced scattering of electrons off the spin uctuations makes the interlayer electron motion incoherent even very close to the Nel temperature, that is, it is the magnetism that suppresses the electronic coherence at TETN and not vice versa. Importantly, short-range magnetic order within the plane survives until T YW.
Our analysis follows from the Heisenberg model where exchange interactions are considered as xed parameters. By including an RKKY-type interaction in the calculation, one might expect that the incoherence of electron motion along the c-axis should in turn lead to a reduction in the effective RKKY coupling and a decrease in J0, thereby amplifying the effect discussed above.
However, the RKKY interaction itself does not appear to be the driving force for setting TN.
It will be interesting to explore whether a similar relationship between interlayer coherence and long-range order exists in other metallic antiferromagnets, such as AgNiO2 or NaxCoO2, where a highly anisotropic electronic state co-exists with frustrated local moment magnetism31,32. More generally, the present nding may also have important implications for our understanding of interlayer decoherence in a host of other low-dimensional systems such as underdoped cuprates, ruthenates, iridates or Fe-based superconductors where short-range spin and/or charge uctuations proliferate over a wide range of their respective phase diagrams. Looking further ahead, it also raises the prospect of bespoke electronic dimensionally control via tuning of the magnetism, for example through a combination of conduction metal layers and coordination polymer magnets, whose J and J0 are highly tunable33,34.
Methods
Crystal synthesis and selection. Single crystals of PdCrO2 were grown using a ux method, as described in ref. 7. A number of samples were contacted for standard four-contact transport measurements along the c axis. To ensure optimal quality of the electrical contacts, DuPont 6838 conductive silver paste was used to contact the gold wires to the sample. The contacts were then cured in an Oxygen atmosphere. The evolution of the c-axis resistance rc(T) upon cooling from 300 to2 K was measured using a Cryogen Free Measurement System, see Supplementary Fig. 1. The highest quality sample, with a residual resistivity ratio rc(300 K)/rc(2 K)
of 108 and dimensions of B0.6 0.6 0.2 mm3, was chosen for the ADMR
measurements.
Angle-dependent magnetoresistance measurements. All measurements were carried out at the High Field Magnet Laboratory (HFML) in Nijmegen, NL, using a custom-built two-axis rotator which allows the sample to be rotated in-situ around the polar angle y or the azimuthal axis f individually. The two-axis rotator was used in one of the He4 ow-cryostats available at the HFML. The temperature is stabilized using the capacitance of a dielectric capacitor, which is known to have negligible eld dependence above 4 K (refs 35,36).
The sample was cooled in zero eld at a rate of 0.5 K per min to prevent thermal shocks, and the c-axis resistivity was measured as the sample was rotated around the polar axis, from y 0 (eld normal to crystal planes) to y 90 (eld parallel
to the the conduction planes) in a xed eld of 30 T. This measurement was repeated at a range of temperatures above and below the long-range magnetic ordering temperature TN 37.5 K, from 4.2 to 44 K. In addition, the eld
dependence was explored by performing polar rotations at xed elds of 1030 T in5 T increments and at a temperature of 4.2 K.
Please see the Supplementary Note 1 for further details.
Data availability. All relevant data are available from S.G. and N.E.H.
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Acknowledgements
We gratefully acknowledge illuminating discussions with A.P. Mackenzie andN. Shannon, and N. Kikugawa for allowing us to reproduce the PdCoO2 data. We also acknowledge the support of HFML-EMFL, a member of the European Magnetic Field Laboratory (EMFL). This work is part of the research program of the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM), which is part of the Netherlands Organization for Scientic Research (NWO).
Author contributions
S.G. and N.E.H. initiated the project. S.G., S.L., S.A. and P.R. performed the measurements, H.T. grew the high-quality crystals, S.G., M.I.K. and N.E.H. analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript, with input from all the other authors.
Additional information
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How to cite this article: Ghannadzadeh, S. et al. Simultaneous loss of interlayer coherence and long-range magnetism in quasi-two-dimensional PdCrO2.
Nat. Commun. 8, 15001 doi: 10.1038/ncomms15001 (2017).
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r The Author(s) 2017
6 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | 8:15001 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15001 | http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications
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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Apr 2017
Abstract
In many layered metals, coherent propagation of electronic excitations is often confined to the highly conducting planes. While strong electron correlations and/or proximity to an ordered phase are believed to be the drivers of this electron confinement, it is still not known what triggers the loss of interlayer coherence in a number of layered systems with strong magnetic fluctuations, such as cuprates. Here, we show that a definitive signature of interlayer coherence in the metallic-layered triangular antiferromagnet PdCrO2 vanishes at the Néel transition temperature. Comparison with the relevant energy scales and with the isostructural non-magnetic PdCoO2 reveals that the interlayer incoherence is driven by the growth of short-range magnetic fluctuations. This establishes a connection between long-range order and interlayer coherence in PdCrO2 and suggests that in many other low-dimensional conductors, incoherent interlayer transport also arises from the strong interaction between the (tunnelling) electrons and fluctuations of some underlying order.
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