Orbital ordering and nematic states



Nematic metamagnetic state in Sr3Ru2O7

This is an active research direction of ruthenate physics. In the external magnetic field, the bilayer ruthenate Sr3Ru2O7 exhibits two consecutive meta-magnetic transitions. Between these transitions resistivity measurements exhibit spontaneous anisotropy (nematic) in the RuO2 plane. In spite of a few years of intensive study, a satisfactory microscopic mechanism has not been established before. There are two key questions. First, Sr3Ru2O7 is a t2g-band (dxz, dyz, and dxy) system with the active 4d-orbitals of Ru. The dxz and dyz-orbitals extend in the xz and yz plane, respectively, thus they behave quasi-one dimensional in the ab-plane. The dxy-orbital lies inside the ab-plane, and its band structure is two-dimensional. Which bands are responsible for the nematic behavior? Second, the nematic metamagnetic states require strong exchange interactions in the d-wave channel, while the usual exchange interaction from Coulomb repulsion is dominate in the s-wave channel. How to reconcile this discrepancy?

We point out that the hybridized quasi-1D dxz and dyz-bands of the t2g-orbital bands are responsible for the nematic ordering based on the following reasoning [Ref. 1] . The nematic metamagnetic state is only observed in the bilayer compound Sr3Ru2O7, but not in the monolayer compound Sr2RuO4, both of which are the t2g-orbital systems. The key difference in electronic structures between them is the bilayer splitting, which is prominent for the quasi-one dimensional bands of dxz and dyz but small for the two-dimensional bands of dxy. It is natural to expect that the spontaneous nematic behavior occurs in the bands of dxz and dyz. Furthermore, our mechanism naturally generates the exchange interaction in the d-wave channel. The orbital band hybridization between dxz and dyz shifts a significant spectra weight of the exchange interaction into the d-wave channel, thus the nematic ordering can arise from the conventional multi-band Hubbard interactions. In our theory, the nematic ordering results from the orbital ordering between the dxz and dyz-orbitals. This work is a large progress and has been widely cited by various experiment and theory groups in the community of Sr3Ru2O7.

QPI pattern on Sr3Ru2O7

We believe that the above ideas captures the essential physics observed in Sr3Ru2O7. Moreover, in order to make a careful comparison with experiment results, we further refine these studies by considering the realistic band structures of Sr3Ru2O7, which are so complicated that are seldom seriously treated in theoretical studies. It includes various effects from the t2g-orbital structure, the staggered distortion of the RuO octahedra, bilayer splitting, spin-orbit coupling, and the surface bias. The band parameters are fitted by matching the calculated Fermi surfaces with those measured in the ARPES measurements. We have calculated the QPI at zero magnetic field in Sr3Ru2O7 by using a tight-binding model which gives rise to the realistic band structure [Ref. 2] . The QPI exhibits a hollow square-like feature arising from the nesting of the quasi-onedimensional dxz and dyz orbital bands, which agrees well with the recent measurements in J. C. Davis and A. Mackenzie's groups. The QPI pattern in the nematic metamagnetic state is also predicted which can be tested in future experiments.

Spectroscopic imaging scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) as a probe to orbital ordering in transition metal oxides

Unlike charge and spin, the orbital degree of freedom of electrons in transition metal oxides is difficult to detect. We present a theoretical study of a new detection method in metallic orbitally active systems by analyzing the quasi-particle scattering interference (QPI) pattern of the spectroscopic imaging scanning tunneling spectroscopy, which is sensitive to orbital structures and orbital ordering [Ref. 3] . We generalize the theoretic framework of the scattering $T$-matrix into the multiple orbital band systemS. The QPIs for the dxz and dyz-orbital bands in the t2g-orbital systems show a characteristic stripe-like feature as a consequence of their quasi-one-dimensional nature, which is robust against orbital hybridization. With the occurrence of orbital ordering proposed in Sr3Ru2O7 and iron pnictides, the stripe-like QPI patterns exhibit nematic distortion breaking the C4 symmetry. This work provides the theoretical support of a new detection method to orbital ordering and the nematic state. It gives excellent explanations to features seen in the recent STM experiments in J. C. Davis' group in both Sr3Ru2O7 and iron-pnictides.

References and talks

  • 1. Wei-cheng Lee, Congjun Wu,
    "Theory of unconventional metamagnetic electron states in orbital band systems", Phys. Rev. B 80, 104438 (2009). See pdf file .

  • 2. Wei-Cheng Lee, D. P. Arovas, Congjun Wu, "Quasiparticle Interference in the Unconventional Metamagnetic Compound Sr$_3$Ru$_2$O$_7$",
    Phys. Rev. B 81, 184403 (2010)
    . See pdf file .

  • 3. Wei-cheng Lee, Congjun Wu, "Spectroscopic Imaging Scanning Tunneling Microscopy as a Probe to Orbital Ordering",
    Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 176101 (2009).
    See pdf file

  • Talk: Unconventional Metamagnetism in the t2g-orbital systems of Sr3Ru2O7



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    Last modified: July 15, 2007.