Coupling between colossal charge density wave ordering and magnetism in Ho2Ir3Si5
Sitaram Ramakrishnan, Jin-Ke Bao, Claudio Eisele, Bikash Patra, Minoru, Nohara, Biplab Bag, Leila Noohinejad, Martin Tolkiehn, Carsten Paulmann,, Achim M. Schaller, Toms Rekis, Surya Rohith Kotla, Andreas Sch\"onleber,, Arumugam Thamizhavel, Bahadur Singh

TL;DR
This study investigates the colossal charge density wave transition in Ho2Ir3Si5, revealing its coupling with magnetism, the role of Ir chains, and the effects of rare-earth substitution on transition temperature and properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the coupling between CDW and magnetism in Ho2Ir3Si5, highlighting the role of Ir chains and anharmonic modulation in this compound.
Findings
Ho2Ir3Si5 exhibits a colossal first-order CDW transition with strong lattice distortion.
Coupling between CDW and magnetic moments influences Ho3+ behavior.
Ir atoms are primarily responsible for the CDW distortion, confirmed by phonon calculations.
Abstract
Ho2Ir3Si5 belongs to the family of three-dimensional (3D) R2Ir3Si5 (R = Lu, Er and Ho) compounds that exhibit a colossal first-order charge density wave (CDW) transition where there is a strong orthorhombic-to-triclinic distortion of the lattice accompanied by superlattice reflections. The analysis by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SXRD) has revealed that the Ir-Ir zigzag chains along c are responsible for the CDW in all three compounds. The replacement of the rare earth element from non-magnetic Lu to magnetic Er or Ho lowers TCDW, where TCDWLu = 200 K, TCDWEr = 150 K and TCDWHo = 90 K. Out of the three compounds, Ho2Ir3Si5 is the only system where second-order superlattice reflections could be observed, indicative of an anharmonic shape of the modulation wave. The CDW transition is observed as anomalies in the temperature dependencies of the specific heat, electrical conductivity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRare-earth and actinide compounds · Organic and Molecular Conductors Research · Iron-based superconductors research
