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    Evidence of an odd-parity hidden order in a spin-orbit coupled correlated iridate

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    1601.01688v1.pdf
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    Genre
    Journal Article
    Date
    2016-01-07
    Author
    Zhao, L
    Torchinsky, DH
    Chu, H
    Ivanov, V
    Lifshitz, R
    Flint, R
    Qi, T
    Cao, G
    Hsieh, D
    Subject
    cond-mat.str-el
    cond-mat.str-el
    cond-mat.supr-con
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5767
    
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    DOI
    10.1038/nphys3517
    Abstract
    © 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited. A rare combination of strong spin-orbit coupling and electron-electron correlations makes the iridate Mott insulator Sr 2 IrO 4 a promising host for novel electronic phases of matter. The resemblance of its crystallographic, magnetic and electronic structures to La 2 CuO 4, as well as the emergence on doping of a pseudogap region and a low-temperature d-wave gap, has particularly strengthened analogies to cuprate high-T c superconductors. However, unlike the cuprate phase diagram, which features a plethora of broken symmetry phases in a pseudogap region that includes charge density wave, stripe, nematic and possibly intra-unit-cell loop-current orders, no broken symmetry phases proximate to the parent antiferromagnetic Mott insulating phase in Sr 2 IrO 4 have been observed so far, making the comparison of iridate to cuprate phenomenology incomplete. Using optical second-harmonic generation, we report evidence of a hidden non-dipolar magnetic order in Sr 2 IrO 4 that breaks both the spatial inversion and rotational symmetries of the underlying tetragonal lattice. Four distinct domain types corresponding to discrete 90°-rotated orientations of a pseudovector order parameter are identified using nonlinear optical microscopy, which is expected from an electronic phase that possesses the symmetries of a magneto-electric loop-current order. The onset temperature of this phase is monotonically suppressed with bulk hole doping, albeit much more weakly than the Néel temperature, revealing an extended region of the phase diagram with purely hidden order. Driving this hidden phase to its quantum critical point may be a path to realizing superconductivity in Sr 2 IrO 4 .
    Citation to related work
    Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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    Nature Physics
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    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/5749
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