Physical Review X (Apr 2020)

Field-Angle-Resolved Magnetic Excitations as a Probe of Hidden-Order Symmetry in CeB_{6}

  • P. Y. Portnichenko,
  • A. Akbari,
  • S. E. Nikitin,
  • A. S. Cameron,
  • A. V. Dukhnenko,
  • V. B. Filipov,
  • N. Yu. Shitsevalova,
  • P. Čermák,
  • I. Radelytskyi,
  • A. Schneidewind,
  • J. Ollivier,
  • A. Podlesnyak,
  • Z. Huesges,
  • J. Xu,
  • A. Ivanov,
  • Y. Sidis,
  • S. Petit,
  • J.-M. Mignot,
  • P. Thalmeier,
  • D. S. Inosov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.021010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. 021010

Abstract

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In contrast to magnetic order formed by electrons’ dipolar moments, ordering phenomena associated with higher-order multipoles (quadrupoles, octupoles, etc.) are more difficult to characterize because of the limited choice of experimental probes that can distinguish different multipolar moments. The heavy-fermion compound CeB_{6} and its La-diluted alloys are among the best-studied realizations of the long-range-ordered multipolar phases, often referred to as “hidden order.” Previously, the hidden order in phase II was identified as primary antiferroquadrupolar and field-induced octupolar order. Here, we present a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of collective excitations in phase II of CeB_{6}. Inelastic neutron scattering (INS) in fields up to 16.5 T reveals a new high-energy mode above 14 T in addition to the low-energy magnetic excitations. The experimental dependence of their energy on the magnitude and angle of the applied magnetic field is compared to the results of a multipolar interaction model. The magnetic excitation spectrum in a rotating field is calculated within a localized approach using the pseudospin representation for the Γ_{8} states. We show that the rotating-field technique at fixed momentum can complement conventional INS measurements of the dispersion at a constant field and holds great promise for identifying the symmetry of multipolar order parameters and the details of intermultipolar interactions that stabilize hidden-order phases.