Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) triangular lattice antiferromagnets (2D-TLA) often manifest intriguing physical and technological properties, due to the strong interplay between lattice geometry and electronic properties. The recently synthesized 2-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenide LiCrTe_2, being a 2D-TLA, enriched the range of materials which can present such properties. In this work, muon spin rotation (mu ^+SR) and neutron powder diffraction (NPD) have been utilized to reveal the true magnetic nature and ground state of LiCrTe_2. From high-resolution NPD the magnetic spin order at base-temperature is not, as previously suggested, helical, but rather collinear antiferromagnetic (AFM) with ferromagnetic (FM) spin coupling within the ab-plane and AFM coupling along the c-axis. The value if the ordered magnetic Cr moment is established as mu _{textrm{Cr}}= 2.36~mu _{textrm{B}}. From detailed mu ^+SR measurements we observe an AFM ordering temperature T_{textrm{N}}approx 125 K. This value is remarkably higher than the one previously reported by magnetic bulk measurements. From mu ^+SR we are able to extract the magnetic order parameter, whose critical exponent allows us to categorize LiCrTe_2 in the 3D Heisenberg AFM universality class. Finally, by combining our magnetic studies with high-resolution synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD), we find a clear coupling between the nuclear and magnetic spin lattices. This suggests the possibility for a strong magnon–phonon coupling, similar to what has been previously observed in the closely related compound LiCrO_2.

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