Role of local geometry in the spin and orbital structure of transition metal compounds
- Authors: Khomskii D.I.1, Kugel K.I.2, Sboychakov A.O.2, Streltsov S.V.3,4
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Affiliations:
- II. Physikalisches Institut
- Institute for Theoretical and Applied Electrodynamics
- Mikheev Institute of Metal Physics, Ural Branch
- Ural Federal University
- Issue: Vol 122, No 3 (2016)
- Pages: 484-498
- Section: Special issue in honor of L.V. Keldysh’s 85th birthday Issue Editor: S. Tikhodeev
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7761/article/view/189918
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063776116030079
- ID: 189918
Cite item
Abstract
We analyze the role of local geometry in the spin and orbital interaction in transition metal compounds with orbital degeneracy. We stress that the tendency observed in the most studied case (transition metals in O6 octahedra with one common oxygen—common corner of neighboring octahedra—and with ~180° metal–oxygen–metal bonds), that ferro-orbital ordering renders antiferro-spin coupling and, vice versa, antiferro-orbitals give ferro-spin ordering, is not valid in the general case, in particular, for octahedra with a common edge and with ~90° M–O–M bonds. Special attention is paid to the “third case,” that of neighboring octahedra with a common face (three common oxygens), which has largely been disregarded until now, although there are many real systems with this geometry. Interestingly enough, the spin-orbit exchange in this case turns out to be simpler and more symmetric than in the first two cases. We also consider, which form the effective exchange takes for different geometries in the case of strong spin–orbit coupling.
About the authors
D. I. Khomskii
II. Physikalisches Institut
Author for correspondence.
Email: khomskii@ph2.uni-koeln.de
Germany, Köln, 50937
K. I. Kugel
Institute for Theoretical and Applied Electrodynamics
Email: khomskii@ph2.uni-koeln.de
Russian Federation, Moscow, 125412
A. O. Sboychakov
Institute for Theoretical and Applied Electrodynamics
Email: khomskii@ph2.uni-koeln.de
Russian Federation, Moscow, 125412
S. V. Streltsov
Mikheev Institute of Metal Physics, Ural Branch; Ural Federal University
Email: khomskii@ph2.uni-koeln.de
Russian Federation, Yekaterinburg, 620990; Yekaterinburg, 620002
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