학술논문

Evidence of a Phonon Hall Effect in the Kitaev Spin Liquid Candidate $\alpha$-RuCl$_3$
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Phys. Rev. X 12, 021025 (2022)
Subject
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons
Language
Abstract
The material $\alpha$-RuCl$_3$ has been the subject of intense scrutiny as a potential Kitaev quantum spin liquid, predicted to display Majorana fermions as low energy excitations. In practice, $\alpha$-RuCl$_3$ undergoes a transition to a state with antiferromagnetic order below a temperature $T_{\rm N}$ $\approx$ 7 K, but this order can be suppressed by applying an external in-plane magnetic field of $H_\parallel$ = 7 T. Whether a quantum spin liquid phase exists just above that field is still an open question, but the reported observation of a quantized thermal Hall conductivity at $H_\parallel$ $>$ 7 T by Kasahara and co-workers $\big[$Kasahara ${\it et \ al}$., Nature ${\bf 559}$, 227 (2018)$\big]$ has been interpreted as evidence of itinerant Majorana fermions in the Kitaev quantum spin liquid state. In this study, we re-examine the origin of the thermal Hall conductivity $\kappa_{\rm xy}$ in $\alpha$-RuCl$_3$. Our measurements of $\kappa_{\rm xy}$($T$) on several different crystals yield a temperature dependence very similar to that of the phonon-dominated longitudinal thermal conductivity $\kappa_{\rm xx}$($T$), for which the natural explanation is that $\kappa_{\rm xy}$ is also mostly carried by phonons. Upon cooling, $\kappa_{\rm xx}$ peaks at $T \simeq$ 20 K, then drops until $T_{\rm N}$, whereupon it suddenly increases again. The abrupt increase below $T_{\rm N}$ is attributed to a sudden reduction in the scattering of phonons by low-energy spin fluctuations as these become partially gapped when the system orders. The fact that $\kappa_{\rm xy}$ also increases suddenly below $T_{\rm N}$ is strong evidence that the thermal Hall effect in $\alpha$-RuCl$_3$ is also carried predominantly by phonons. This implies that any quantized signal from Majorana edge modes would have to come on top of a sizable -- and sample-dependent -- phonon background.
Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures