A jeff = 1/2 pseudospinon continuum in CaIrO3
Abstract
In so-called jeff = 1/2 systems, including some iridates and ruthenates, the coherent superposition of t2g orbitals in the ground state gives rise to hopping processes that strongly depend on the bond geometry. Resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) measurements on CaIrO3 reveal a prototypical jeff = 1/2 pseudospinon continuum, a hallmark of one-dimensional (1D) magnetic systems despite its three-dimensional crystal structure. The experimental spectra compare very well to the calculated magnetic dynamical structure factor of weakly coupled spin-1/2 chains. We attribute the onset of such quasi-1D magnetism to the fundamental difference in the magnetic interactions between the jeff = 1/2 pseudospins along the corner- and edge-sharing bonds in CaIrO3.
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