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In situ control of the helical and skyrmion phases in Cu2OSeO3 using high-pressure helium gas up to 5 kbar
Type of publication
Peer-reviewed
Publikationsform
Original article (peer-reviewed)
Author
Crisanti M., Reynolds N., Živković I., Magrez A., Rønnow H. M., Cubitt R., White J. S.,
Project
Discovery and Nanoengineering of Novel Skyrmion-hosting Materials
Show all
Original article (peer-reviewed)
Journal
Physical Review B
Volume (Issue)
101(21)
Page(s)
214435 - 214435
Title of proceedings
Physical Review B
DOI
10.1103/physrevb.101.214435
Open Access
URL
http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.101.214435
Type of Open Access
Publisher (Gold Open Access)
Abstract
We report a small-angle neutron scattering study of the helical and skyrmion lattice order in single-crystal Cu2OSeO3 under quasihydrostatic helium gas pressures up to 5 kbar. By using helium gas as the pressure-transmitting medium (PTM) we ensure pressure application with improved hydrostaticity at cryogenic temperatures compared with previous reports where liquid PTMs were used. For 5-kbar He gas pressure we observe modest changes of the ambient pressure phase diagram; the critical temperature T-c changes by +2.8(2)%, while in the low-T limit the helical propagation vector vertical bar q vertical bar changes by -0.5(2)%, the lower critical field H-c1 changes by +2.5(1.0)%, and the upper critical field Hc(2) remains unchanged within uncertainty. The skyrmion phase also changes little under pressure; its largest T extent varies from T-c - 2.5(5) K at ambient pressure to T-c - 3.0(5) K at 5 kbar, and its location in the phase diagram follows the pressure-driven shift of T-c. The weak pressure dependences of the critical magnetic fields and skyrmion phase contrast strongly with much stronger pressure-driven changes reported from previous quasihydrostatic pressure studies. Taking into account the present results and those of other uniaxial pressure data, we suggest that the results of previous quasihydrostatic pressure studies were influenced by inadvertent directional stress pressure components. Overall, our study represents a high-pressure study of the chiral magnetism in Cu2OSeO3 under the most hydrostatic high-pressure conditions to date and serves also as a salient reminder of the sensitivity of chiral magnets to deviations from hydrostaticity in quasihydrostatic high-pressure studies.
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