Abstract

We present a unified description of the response of the hyperhoneycomb Kitaev magnet $\beta$-$\text{Li}_2\text{IrO}_3$ to applied magnetic fields along the orthorhombic directions ${\bf a}$, ${\bf b}$ and ${\bf c}$. This description is based on the minimal nearest-neighbor $J$-$K$-$\Gamma$ model and builds on the idea that the incommensurate counter-rotating order observed experimentally at zero field can be treated as a long-distance twisting of a nearby commensurate order with six spin sublattices. The results reveal that the behavior of the system for ${\bf H}\parallel{\bf a}$, ${\bf H}\parallel{\bf b}$ and ${\bf H}\parallel{\bf c}$ share a number of qualitative features, including: i) a strong intertwining of the modulated, counter-rotating order with a set of uniform orders; ii) the disappearance of the modulated order at a critical field $H^\ast$, whose value is strongly anisotropic with $H_{\bf b}^\ast\!<\!H_{\bf c}^\ast\!\ll\!H_{\bf a}^\ast$; iii) the presence of a robust zigzag phase above $H^\ast$; and iv) the fulfillment of the Bragg peak intensity sum rule. It is noteworthy that the disappearance of the modulated order for ${\bf H}\parallel{\bf c}$ proceeds via a `metamagnetic' first-order transition which does not restore all broken symmetries. This implies the existence of a second finite-$T$ phase transition at higher magnetic fields. We also demonstrate that quantum fluctuations give rise to a significant reduction of the local moments for all directions of the field. The results for the total magnetization for ${\bf H}\parallel{\bf b}$ are consistent with available data and confirm a previous assertion that the system is very close to the highly-frustrated $K$-$\Gamma$ line in parameter space. Our predictions for the magnetic response for fields along ${\bf a}$ and ${\bf c}$ await experimental verification.

Highlights

  • In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the magnetic properties of 4d and 5d transition-metal compounds with tricoordinated lattices and bond-directional exchange anisotropies, broadly known as Kitaev materials [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • The main interest in these materials has been triggered by the realization [1,2] that the dominant exchange interaction between the effective spinorbit-entangled jeff = 1/2 moments is the so-called Kitaev anisotropy, which is known to stabilize a variety of quantum spin liquid phases [32,33,34,35,36]

  • All experimental data reported so far for Kitaev materials show that their response to the magnetic field depends very strongly on its direction

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

There has been a growing interest in the magnetic properties of 4d and 5d transition-metal compounds with tricoordinated lattices and bond-directional exchange anisotropies, broadly known as Kitaev materials [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. All experimental data reported so far for Kitaev materials show that their response to the magnetic field depends very strongly on its direction. One shortcoming of our semianalytical classical approach is that it overestimates the magnetization at Hb∗ by approximately a factor of 2 compared to the experimental value This has led to the assertion [50] that the spin lengths are strongly renormalized by quantum fluctuations due to the close proximity to the special K- line in parameter space, where the system is highly frustrated [49]. The definitions of these components in terms of the Fourier transform of the spin configuration are given in Appendix A 1

THE MINIMAL J-K- MODEL
General spin sublattice structure
Robustness of high-field zigzag orders
Symmetries
MAGNETIZATION PROCESS AND THE EFFECT OF QUANTUM FLUCTUATIONS
MAGNETIC TORQUE
EFFECT OF THERMAL FLUCTUATIONS AND CLASSICAL H-T PHASE DIAGRAM
VIII. DISCUSSION
Definitions and conventions
Local spin length constraints in terms of structure factors
Quadratic spin-wave Hamiltonian
Findings
Total magnetization and torque at zero temperature
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