Giant magnetocaloric effect in spin supersolid candidate Na2BaCo(PO4)2

被引:0
作者
Junsen Xiang
Chuandi Zhang
Yuan Gao
Wolfgang Schmidt
Karin Schmalzl
Chin-Wei Wang
Bo Li
Ning Xi
Xin-Yang Liu
Hai Jin
Gang Li
Jun Shen
Ziyu Chen
Yang Qi
Yuan Wan
Wentao Jin
Wei Li
Peijie Sun
Gang Su
机构
[1] Institute of Physics,Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics
[2] Chinese Academy of Sciences,School of Physics
[3] Beihang University,CAS Key Laboratory of Theoretical Physics, Institute of Theoretical Physics
[4] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Department of Astronomy
[5] Jülich Centre for Neutron Science at Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL),Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry
[6] Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH,State Key Laboratory of Surface Physics and Department of Physics
[7] Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation,CAS Center for Excellence in Topological Quantum Computation
[8] Tsinghua University,Peng Huanwu Collaborative Center for Research and Education
[9] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Kavli Institute for Theoretical Sciences, and School of Physical Sciences
[10] Fudan University,undefined
[11] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
[12] Beihang University,undefined
[13] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
Nature | 2024年 / 625卷
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摘要
Supersolid, an exotic quantum state of matter that consists of particles forming an incompressible solid structure while simultaneously showing superfluidity of zero viscosity1, is one of the long-standing pursuits in fundamental research2,3. Although the initial report of 4He supersolid turned out to be an artefact4, this intriguing quantum matter has inspired enthusiastic investigations into ultracold quantum gases5–8. Nevertheless, the realization of supersolidity in condensed matter remains elusive. Here we find evidence for a quantum magnetic analogue of supersolid—the spin supersolid—in the recently synthesized triangular-lattice antiferromagnet Na2BaCo(PO4)2 (ref. 9). Notably, a giant magnetocaloric effect related to the spin supersolidity is observed in the demagnetization cooling process, manifesting itself as two prominent valley-like regimes, with the lowest temperature attaining below 100 mK. Not only is there an experimentally determined series of critical fields but the demagnetization cooling profile also shows excellent agreement with the theoretical simulations with an easy-axis Heisenberg model. Neutron diffractions also successfully locate the proposed spin supersolid phases by revealing the coexistence of three-sublattice spin solid order and interlayer incommensurability indicative of the spin superfluidity. Thus, our results reveal a strong entropic effect of the spin supersolid phase in a frustrated quantum magnet and open up a viable and promising avenue for applications in sub-kelvin refrigeration, especially in the context of persistent concerns about helium shortages10,11.
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页码:270 / 275
页数:5
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