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The Power of Strong Spin-Orbit Interactions: Challenges and Opportunities in Iridates

来源:
报告题目   The Power of Strong Spin-Orbit Interactions: Challenges and Opportunities in Iridates
报告人   Prof. CAO Gang
报告人单位   Department of Physics, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
报告时间   2018-05-23
报告地点   合肥微尺度物质科学国家研究中心九楼会议室(9004)
主办单位   合肥微尺度物质科学国家研究中心、国际功能材料量子设计中心(ICQD)
报告介绍
Abstract:
Effects of spin-orbit interactions in condensed matter are an important and rapidly evolving topic. Strong competition between spin-orbit, on-site Coulomb and crystalline electric field interactions in iridates drives exotic quantum states that are unique to this group of materials. This talk offers a brief review of current experimental studies of iridates [1] and emphasize discrepancies between experimental confirmation and theoretical proposals that address superconducting, topological and quantum spin liquid phases. It then reports our most recent study on electrical-current controlled behavior in iridates [2]. Electrical control of structural and physical properties is a long-sought, but elusive goal of contemporary science and technology. This work demonstrates that a combination of strong spin-orbit interactions and a canted antiferromagnetic Mott state is sufficient to attain that goal and points the way to novel possibilities for functional materials and devices [2].
References:
1. “The Challenge of Spin-Orbit-Tuned Ground-States in the Iridates: A Key Issues Review”, Gang Cao and P. Schlottmann, Reports on Progress in Physics 81 042502 (2018); https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6633/aaa979 
2. “Electrical Control of Structural and Physical Properties via Spin-Orbit Interactions in Sr2IrO4”, G. Cao, J. Terzic, H. D. Zhao, H. Zheng, Peter Riseborough, L. E. DeLong, Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 017201 (2018); https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.017201Editor’s Suggestion
 
Biosketch:
  Gang Cao obtained his PhD from Temple University under direction of Prof. Jack E. Crow, the founding Director of the US National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in 1993. Dr. Cao subsequently worked at the US National High Magnetic Field Laboratory from 1993 to 2002, and then as Jack and Linda Gill Professor at University of Kentucky from 2002 to 2016 before he joined the faculty of the University of Colorado at Boulder. Professor Cao is Fellow of the American Physical Society. His research encompasses a methodical search for novel quantum materials in the single-crystal form, and a systematic effort to elucidate the underlying physics of these materials. Visit his homepage for details: https://www.colorado.edu/lab/cao/.

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