Towards quantum spin liquid state Chemical dilution of the magnetic lattice in α-RuCl3

Open Access
Authors
  • E. Vinokurova
Supervisors
Cosupervisors
  • B. Rasche
Award date 31-03-2026
Number of pages 266
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute (WZI)
Abstract

α-RuCl3 is a perspective candidate for the elusive quantum-spin-liquid (QSL) state. It is purported to host Kitaev-type interactions, but, nevertheless, it orders long-range antiferromagnetically at low temperatures. Our goal is to suppress the magnetic order and increase the degree of frustration in order to stabilize the QSL state. To attempt that, this experimental work deliberately introduces disorder into α-RuCl3 by chemical doping in order to magnetically dilute its 2D sublattice of Ru3+ (S = ) cations. Non-magnetic centers are created through either reductive cationic substitution or intercalation.
In the first approach, magnetically active Ru3+ (S = ) atoms are partially replaced by non-magnetic Rh3+ (S = 0) impurities in order to create spin vacancies and dissociate long-range magnetic interactions between the Ru3+ atoms. Mixed Ru1-xRhxCl3 crystals (x = 0.02 - 0.6) of various sizes are grown by chemical vapor transport method. We thoroughly evaluate the homogeneity of Rh substitution at the Ru sites using calibrated energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, complemented by powder- and single-crystal X-ray diffraction techniques to accurately analyze its statistical distribution. Our X-ray diffraction studies confirm that all members of the substitution series are isostructural to the parent α-RuCl3 compound. A magnetic phase diagram of Ru1-xRhxCl3 is constructed based on the bulk DC magnetization and specific heat measurements as a function of Rh content. We observe the targeted gradual decrease and eventually full suppression of the long-range antiferromagnetic order near the critical concentration xc = 0.2, near which the quantum spin liquid state is anticipated.

In the second approach, bulk α-RuCl3 crystals are intercalated with K+ atoms using electrochemistry. Partial reduction of the magnetically active Ru3+ atoms to Ru2+ is expected, thus, diluting the magnetic system analogously to the previous approach and suppressing long-range magnetism. Electrochemical intercalation yields a statistically large number of crystals which contain structurally complex phases and phase-segregated regions. Namely, we identify a predominant disordered rhombohedral phase with an increased interlayer spacing (8.2-8.8 Å) and an ordered trigonal KRu2Cl6 phase with a tighter stacking (7 Å) existing only in nano- and µm-sized domains. The crystal structure models of both new phases are determined by X-ray diffraction and 3D electron diffraction methods, whereas their average chemical compositions are evaluated by energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Complementary Raman, IR, and XPS spectroscopy data as well as thermogravimetric analysis combined with the mass spectrometry deliver further information about the elemental composition, oxidation states, phase purity and thermal stability of the intercalated crystals. The QSL state is not achieved in the intercalated KxRuCl3 crystals; nevertheless, their magnetic properties are strongly altered by intercalation. In particular, we observe decreasing Néel temperatures at an intermediate K content and a complete suppression of the magnetic order at a higher K content. We give an outlook on how the electrochemical setup can be improved in order to obtain more compositionally and structurally uniform crystals for further research.

Additionally, we perform explorative intercalation of α-RuCl3 polycrystalline powders by various cations (Li+, Na+, K+, Cs+, NH4+) in   organic and aqueous media. Operando X-ray diffraction studies during the intercalation process are done to monitor the phase transformations. We identify new crystalline phases that can be used as a starting point for a new promising research line.

Document type PhD thesis
Language English
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