Author:
Willers Thomas,Strigari Fabio,Hu Zhiwei,Sessi Violetta,Brookes Nicholas B.,Bauer Eric D.,Sarrao John L.,Thompson J. D.,Tanaka Arata,Wirth Steffen,Tjeng Liu Hao,Severing Andrea
Abstract
The interplay of structural, orbital, charge, and spin degrees of freedom is at the heart of many emergent phenomena, including superconductivity. Unraveling the underlying forces of such novel phases is a great challenge because it not only requires understanding each of these degrees of freedom, it also involves accounting for the interplay between them. Cerium-based heavy fermion compounds are an ideal playground for investigating these interdependencies, and we present evidence for a correlation between orbital anisotropy and the ground states in a representative family of materials. We have measured the 4f crystal-electric field ground-state wave functions of the strongly correlated materials CeRh1−xIrxIn5 with great accuracy using linear polarization-dependent soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy. These measurements show that these wave functions correlate with the ground-state properties of the substitution series, which covers long-range antiferromagnetic order, unconventional superconductivity, and coexistence of these two states.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
64 articles.
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