Hidden Symmetries and Their Consequences in the t2g Cubic Perovskites

The transition metal oxides have been the source of many fascinating physical phenomena such as high Tc superconductivity, colossal magnetoresistance, and orbiton physics [ 1 ]. These surprising and diverse physical properties arise from strong correlation effects in the 3d bands. Most theoretical attempts to understand such systems are based on the Hubbard model. Here we report that for high symmetry transition metal oxides with threefold t2g bands, this model possesses several novel hidden symmetries with many surprising consequences on the ground state properties [ 2, 3 ].

We consider cubic 3d1 perovskites ( i.e., ABO3 ) where the five initially degenerate 3d states are split into a two-fold eg manifold and a lower-energy threefold t2g manifold with wavefunctions dyztriple equals X, dxztriple equals Y, and dxy triple equals Z ( see Figure 1 ). Keeping only the t2g states, we base our discussion on the following generic three-band Hubbard Hamiltonian:

    equation 1

Fig. 1. A schematic view of the splitting of the five-fold 3d orbitals under cubic crystal field. The transition metal is located at the center of the oxygen octahedra (shown in blue).

Here c sub i, alpha, sigma creates a t2g electron ( or hole ) on the ith ion in the alpha spatial orbital ( i.e., alpha = X, Y or Z ) with spin sigma, and eplison sub i, alpha is the on-site energy of the orbital at site i of a simple cubic lattice. u sub i alpha , i beta is the on-site Coulomb repulsion between orbitals alpha and beta at site i . t sub i alpha, j beta is the effective hopping parameter from the alpha orbital at site i to the beta orbital at its nearest neighbour site j.

As shown in Figure 2, for cubic perovskites where the metal-oxygen-metal ( M-O-M ) bond is linear, the hopping parameter t sub i alpha, j beta is diagonal in the orbital indices alpha and beta. This suggests that the total number of electrons in each orbital is a good quantum number. Furthermore t sub i alpha, j beta is zero along the “inactive” axis perpendicular to the orbital plane alpha, due to symmetry ( Figure 2 ). In other words an alpha-electron can only hop in alpha-plane. Thus, for the nth plane perpendicular to the alpha-axis, the total number Nn alpha of electrons in the alpha-orbital is conserved, i.e., it is a good quantum number. Hence, one can consider the three dimensional lattice as a superposition of interpenetrating planes perpendicular to the x, y, and z-directions, each having a constant number of X, Y, and Z electrons, respectively, which are good quantum numbers ( see Figure 3 ( a ) ).

Figure 2. A schematic view of the symmetry of the hopping parameter t via intermediate oxygen p-orbitals. Note that there is no hopping between different d-orbitals and no hopping along the z-axis for Z-orbitals due to symmetry.

In Reference [ 3 ] we also show that the global rotation of the spins of alpha-orbital electrons in any given plane perpendicular to the alpha-axis leaves the Hubbard Hamiltonian given in Equation ( 1 ) invariant. As a consequence of this rotational symmetry, one may conclude that both the Hubbard model and its 2nd order perturbation at order of t2/U, the Kugel- Khomskii ( KK) Hamiltonian, cannot support any long range spin order: if one assumes long-range spin order, the spins associated with alpha-orbitals within any given plane can be rotated at zero cost in energy, thereby destroying the supposed correlations among planes and/or among orbitals, and therefore the long-range order [ 2, 3 ]. The crucial conclusion here is that any credible theory of spin-ordering in these systems cannot be based solely on the KK Hamiltonian, as currently done in the literature.

The hidden symmetries discussed here are very useful in simplifying the exact numerical studies of small clusters. For example, to treat the simpler KK Hamiltonian for a cube of eight sites even using the conservation of the total spin ( a widely used symmetry ) requires the diagonalization of a matrix of dimensionality on the order of ˝ million. Using the conservation laws applied to each face of the cube (see Figure 3 ( a ) ), there is an astonishing numeri- cal simplification. The ground state can be found from a Hamiltonian matrix within a manifold of just 16 states!! As seen in Figure 3 ( b - d ), these states are all products of four dimer states in each of which two electrons are paired into a spin zero singlet state. In this model a very unusual phenomenon occurs: when the electrons hop from site to site along active axes, they retain their membership in the singlet they started in. An example of this transformation is seen by comparing Figures 3 ( c ) and 3 ( d ): pairs of electrons are tied together, as if by quantum mechanical rubber bands!

Figure 3

In conclusion, we uncovered several novel symmetries of the Hubbard model for orthogonal t2g systems. Using these symmetries, we rigorously showed that both the original Hubbard Hamiltonian [ 2 ] and the KK effective Hamiltonian [ 1 ] ( without spin-orbit interactions ) do not permit the development of long-range spin order in a three dimensional orthogonal lattice at nonzero temperature. It is important to take proper account of the symmetries identified here and to recognize that the observed longrange spin order can only be explained with the Hubbard or KK Hamiltonian providing suitable symmetry breaking terms are included. Such perturbations therefore play a crucial role in determining the observed behavior of these transition metal oxides. We hope that these results will inspire experimentalists to synthesize new t2g transition metal oxides with tetragonal or higher symmetry. Such systems would have quite striking and anomalous properties.

References:

[1] Y. Tokura and N. Nagaosa, Science 288, 462 (2000) and references therein.

[2] A. B. Harris, T. Yildirim, A. Aharony, O. Entin-Wohlman, and I. Ya. Korenblit, Phys. Rev. Lett. (in press, 2003)(cond-mat/0303219).

[3] A. B. Harris, T. Yildirim, O. Entin-Wohlman, and A. Aharony, Phys. Rev. B (cond-mat/0307515).


T. Yildirim
NIST Center for Neutron Research
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Gaithersburg, MD 20899

A. B. Harris
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104

A. Aharony, O. Entin-Wohlman, and I. Ya. Korenblit
Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv 69978, Israel


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