Frustration and anisotropic exchange in ytterbium magnets with edge-shared octahedra
Abstract
We consider the structure of anisotropic exchange interactions in ytterbium-based insulating rare-earth magnets built from edge-sharing octahedra. We argue the features of trivalent ytterbium and this structural configuration allow for a qualitative determination of the different anisotropic exchange regimes that may manifest in such compounds. The validity of such super-exchange calculations is tested through comparison to the well-characterized breathing pyrochlore compound Ba3Yb2Zn5O11. With this in hand, we then consider application to three-dimensional pyrochlore spinels as well as two-dimensional honeycomb and triangular lattice systems built from such edge-sharing octahedra. We find an extended regime of robust emergent weak anisotropy with dominant antiferromagnetic Heisenberg interactions as well as smaller regions with strong anisotropy. We discuss the implications of our results for known compounds with the above structures, such as the spinels AYb2X4 (A = Cd, Mg, X = S, Se), the triangular compound YbMgGaO4, which have recently emerged as promising candidates for observing unconventional magnetic phenomena. Finally, we speculate on implications for the R2M2O7 pyrochlore compounds and some little studied honeycomb ytterbium magnets.