Published in

Nature Research, Nature Communications, 1(10), 2019

DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-09663-3

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Dimensional crossover in a layered ferromagnet detected by spin correlation driven distortions

Journal article published in 2019 by A. Ron, E. Zoghlin ORCID, L. Balents, S. D. Wilson, S. D. Wilson, D. Hsieh
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractMagneto-elastic distortions are commonly detected across magnetic long-range ordering (LRO) transitions. In principle, they are also induced by the magnetic short-range ordering (SRO) that precedes a LRO transition, which contains information about short-range correlations and energetics that are essential for understanding how LRO is established. However these distortions are difficult to resolve because the associated atomic displacements are exceedingly small and do not break symmetry. Here we demonstrate high-multipole nonlinear optical polarimetry as a sensitive and mode selective probe of SRO induced distortions using CrSiTe3 as a testbed. This compound is composed of weakly bonded sheets of nearly isotropic ferromagnetically interacting spins that, in the Heisenberg limit, would individually be impeded from LRO by the Mermin-Wagner theorem. Our results show that CrSiTe3 evades this law via a two-step crossover from two- to three-dimensional magnetic SRO, manifested through two successive and previously undetected totally symmetric distortions above its Curie temperature.