Complex charge ordering in CeRuSn
R. Feyerherm, E. Dudzik, S. Valencia, J. A. Mydosh, Y.-K. Huang, W., Hermes, and R. P\"ottgen

TL;DR
CeRuSn exhibits complex, temperature- and x-ray-induced reversible charge ordering transitions involving Ce ions, with a modulated ground state sensitive to external stimuli, revealing unique intermetallic behavior.
Contribution
This study uncovers a novel, reversible charge ordering phenomenon in CeRuSn, demonstrating x-ray induced phase changes and a complex modulated ground state not seen in other intermetallics.
Findings
Charge ordering causes unit cell doubling at room temperature.
Low-temperature phase features competing modulation periods.
X-ray irradiation can destroy the modulated state, which is reversible by heating.
Abstract
At ambient temperatures, CeRuSn exhibits an extraordinary structure with a coexistence of two types of Ce ions in a metallic environment, namely trivalent Ce3+ and intermediate valent Ce(4-x)+. Charge ordering produces a doubling of the unit cell along the c-axis with respect to the basic monoclinic CeCoAl type structure. Below room temperature, a phase transition with very broad hysteresis has been observed in various bulk properties like electrical resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat. The present x-ray diffraction results show that at low temperatures the doubling of the CeCoAl type structure is replaced by an ill-defined modulated ground state. In this state, at least three different modulation periods compete, with the dominant mode close to a tripling of the basic cell. The transition is accompanied by a significant contraction of the c axis. XANES data suggest…
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