Communications Materials (Oct 2023)

Competition between magnetic interactions and structural instabilities leading to itinerant frustration in the triangular lattice antiferromagnet LiCrSe2

  • Elisabetta Nocerino,
  • Shintaro Kobayashi,
  • Catherine Witteveen,
  • Ola K. Forslund,
  • Nami Matsubara,
  • Chiu Tang,
  • Takeshi Matsukawa,
  • Akinori Hoshikawa,
  • Akihiro Koda,
  • Kazuyoshi Yoshimura,
  • Izumi Umegaki,
  • Yasmine Sassa,
  • Fabian O. von Rohr,
  • Vladimir Pomjakushin,
  • Jess H. Brewer,
  • Jun Sugiyama,
  • Martin Månsson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43246-023-00407-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

Read online

Abstract LiCrSe2 constitutes a recent valuable addition to the ensemble of two-dimensional triangular lattice antiferromagnets. In this work, we present a comprehensive study of the low temperature nuclear and magnetic structure established in this material. Being subject to a strong magnetoelastic coupling, LiCrSe2 was found to undergo a first order structural transition from a trigonal crystal system ( $$P\bar{3}m1$$ P 3 ¯ m 1 ) to a monoclinic one (C2/m) at T s = 30 K. Such restructuring of the lattice is accompanied by a magnetic transition at T N = 30 K. Refinement of the magnetic structure with neutron diffraction data and complementary muon spin rotation analysis reveal the presence of a complex incommensurate magnetic structure with a up-up-down-down arrangement of the chromium moments with ferromagnetic double chains coupled antiferromagnetically. The spin axial vector is also modulated both in direction and modulus, resulting in a spin density wave-like order with periodic suppression of the chromium moment along the chains. This behavior is believed to appear as a result of strong competition between direct exchange antiferromagnetic and superexchange ferromagnetic couplings established between both nearest neighbor and next nearest neighbor Cr3+ ions. We finally conjecture that the resulting magnetic order is stabilized via subtle vacancy/charge order within the lithium layers, potentially causing a mix of two co-existing magnetic phases within the sample.