Exchange interactions, Jahn-Teller coupling, and multipole orders in pseudospin one-half $5\boldsymbol{d}^\mathbf{2}$ Mott insulators
Giniyat Khaliullin, Derek Churchill, P. Peter Stavropoulos, Hae-Young, Kee

TL;DR
This paper develops a microscopic theory for multipole interactions in 5d^2 transition metal compounds, revealing novel pseudospin models, hidden symmetries, and exotic ordered states relevant for understanding complex magnetic and orbital phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces new pseudospin Hamiltonians for 5d^2 ions, uncovers hidden SU(2) symmetry in edge-shared octahedra, and explores their ground states on various lattices with analytical and numerical methods.
Findings
Discovery of bond-independent pseudospin interactions with SU(2) symmetry.
Identification of a critical point with degenerate quadrupole and octupole states.
Prediction of exotic vortex-like pseudospin states due to geometrical frustration.
Abstract
We develop a microscopic theory of multipole interactions and orderings in 5 transition metal ion compounds. In a cubic environment, the ground state of 5 ions is a non-Kramers doublet, which is nonmagnetic but hosts quadrupole and octupole moments. We derive pseudospin one-half Hamiltonians describing various spin-orbital exchange processes between these ions. Direct overlap of the orbitals results in bond-dependent pseudospin interactions similar to those for orbitals in manganites. The superexchange process via oxygen ions generates new types of pairwise interactions. In perovskites with 180 bonding, we find nearly equal mixture of Heisenberg and orbital compass couplings. The 90 superexchange in compounds with edge-shared octahedra is most unusual: despite highly anisotropic shapes of the wavefunctions, the pseudospin…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
