Orthorhombic distortion drives orbital ordering in an antiferromagnetic 3d1 Mott insulator

Abstract

The orbital, which represents the shape of the electron cloud, very often strongly influences the manifestation of various exotic phenomena, e.g., magnetism, metal-insulator transition, colossal magnetoresistance, unconventional superconductivity etc. in solid-state systems. The observation of the antiferromagnetism in RETiO3 (RE=rare earth) series has been puzzling since the celebrated Kugel-Khomskii model of spin-orbital super exchange predicts ferromagnetism in an orbitally degenerate d1 systems. Further, the existence of the orbitally ordered vs. orbital liquid phase in both antiferromagnetic and paramagnetic phase have been unsettled issues thus far. To address these long-standing questions, we investigate single crystalline film of PrTiO3. Our synchrotron X-ray diffraction measurements confirm the retention of bulk-like orthorhombic (D2h) symmetry in the thin film geometry. We observe similar X-ray linear dichroism signal in both paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic phase, which can be accounted by ferro orbital ordering (FOO). While the presence of D2h crystal field does not guarantee lifting of orbital degeneracy always, we find it to be strong enough in these rare-earth titanates, leading to the FOO state. Thus, our work demonstrates the orthorhombic distortion is the driving force for the orbital ordering of antiferromagnetic RETiO3.

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