Disorder-driven magnetic duality in the spin-12 system ktenasite, Cu2.7Zn2.3(SO4)2(OH)6·6H2O
Abstract
Disorder in frustrated quantum systems can critically influence their magnetic ground states and drive exotic correlated behavior. In the S = 12 system ktenasite, Cu2.7Zn2.3(SO4)2(OH)6·6H2O, we show that structural disorder drives an unexpected dimensional crossover and stabilizes a rare coexistence of distinct magnetic states. Neutron diffraction reveals significant Cu/Zn mixing at the Cu2 site, which tunes the Cu2+ sublattice from a two-dimensional scalene-distorted triangular lattice into a one-dimensional spin-chain network. Magnetic susceptibility, neutron diffraction, ac susceptibility, and specific heat measurements collectively indicate magnetic duality: a coexistence of incommensurate long-range magnetic order below TN = 4\,K and a cluster spin-glass state with Tf = 3.28\,K at = 10\,Hz. Our findings highlight ktenasite as a rare platform where structural disorder tunes the effective dimensionality and stabilizes coexisting ordered and glassy magnetic phases, offering a unique opportunity to explore the interplay of frustration, disorder, and dimensional crossover in quantum magnets.
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