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Resolving the nature of electronic excitations in resonant inelastic x-ray scattering

Cited 12 time in Web of Science Cited 12 time in Scopus
Authors

Kang, M.; Pelliciari, J.; Krockenberger, Y.; Li, J.; McNally, D. E.; Paris, E.; Liang, R.; Hardy, W. N.; Bonn, D. A.; Yamamoto, H.; Schmitt, T.; Comin, R.

Issue Date
2019-01
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Physical Review B, Vol.99 No.4, p. 045105
Abstract
The study of elementary bosonic excitations is essential toward a complete description of quantum electronic solids. In this context, resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) has recently risen to becoming a versatile probe of electronic excitations in strongly correlated electron systems. The nature of the radiation-matter interaction endows RIXS with the ability to resolve the charge, spin, and orbital nature of individual excitations. However, this capability has been only marginally explored to date. Here, we demonstrate a systematic method for the extraction of the character of excitations as imprinted in the azimuthal dependence of the RIXS signal. Using this approach, we resolve the charge, spin, and orbital nature of elastic scattering, (para-)magnon/bimagnon modes, and higher-energy dd excitations in magnetically ordered and superconducting copper oxide perovskites (Nd2CuO4 and YBa2Cu3O6.75). Our method derives from a direct application of scattering theory, enabling us to deconstruct the complex scattering tensor as a function of energy loss. In particular, we use the characteristic tensorial nature of each excitation to precisely and reliably disentangle the charge and spin contributions to the low-energy RIXS spectrum. This procedure enables to separately track the evolution of spin and charge spectral distributions in cuprates with doping. Our results demonstrate a new capability that can be integrated into the RIXS toolset and that promises to be widely applicable to materials with intertwined spin, orbital, and charge excitations.
ISSN
2469-9950
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/218813
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.99.045105
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • Department of Physics and Astronomy
Research Area Quantum Materials, Scattering Techniques, Spectroscopy

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