ABSTRACT
We study the unoccupied electronic structure of the spin-1/2 quantum magnet TiOCl using x-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy (XANES) at the Ti L and O K edges. We acquire data both in total electron and fluorescence yield modes (TEY and FY, respectively). While only the latter allows us to access the unconventional low-temperature spin-Peierls (SP) phase of TiOCl, the signal is found to suffer from significant self-absorption in this case. Nevertheless, we conclude from FY data that effects of the SP distortion on the electronic structure are absent in the incommensurate intermediate phase within experimental accuracy. The similarity of room-temperature FY and TEY data, the latter not being obscured by self-absorption, allows us to use TEY spectra for comparison with simulations. These are performed by means of cluster calculations in D(4h) and D(2h) symmetries using two different codes. We extract values of the crystal-field splitting and parameterize our results using the commonly seen notation of Slater, Racah and Butler. In all cases, good agreement with published values from other studies is found.
ABSTRACT
We combine high-resolution resonant inelastic x-ray scattering with cluster calculations utilizing a recently derived effective magnetic scattering operator to analyze the polarization, excitation energy, and momentum-dependent excitation spectrum of the low-dimensional quantum magnet TiOCl in the range expected for orbital and magnetic excitations (0-2.5 eV). Ti 3d orbital excitations yield complete information on the temperature-dependent crystal-field splitting. In the spin-Peierls phase we observe a dispersive two-spinon excitation and estimate the inter- and intradimer magnetic exchange coupling from a comparison to cluster calculations.
ABSTRACT
The spectral weight evolution of the low-dimensional Mott insulator TiOCl upon alkali-metal dosing has been studied by photoelectron spectroscopy. We observe a spectral weight transfer between the lower Hubbard band and an additional peak upon electron doping, in line with quantitative expectations in the atomic limit for changing the number of singly and doubly occupied sites. This observation is an unconditional hallmark of correlated bands and has not been reported before. In contrast, the absence of a metallic quasiparticle peak can be traced back to a simple one-particle effect.