NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hase, Masashi; Ebukuro, Yuta; Kuroe, Haruhiko; Matsumoto, Masashige; Matsuo, Akira; Kindo, Koichi; Hester, James R.; Sato, Taku J.; Yamazaki, Hiroki
2017-04-01
We measured magnetization, specific heat, electron spin resonance, neutron diffraction, and inelastic neutron scattering of CrVMoO7 powder. An antiferromagnetically ordered state appears below TN=26.5 ±0.8 K. We consider that the probable spin model for CrVMoO7 is an interacting antiferromagnetic spin-3/2 dimer model. We evaluated the intradimer interaction J to be 25 ±1 K and the effective interdimer interaction Jeff to be 8.8 ±1 K. CrVMoO7 is a rare spin dimer compound that shows an antiferromagnetically ordered state at atmospheric pressure and zero magnetic field. The magnitude of ordered moments is 0.73 (2 ) μB . It is much smaller than a classical value ˜3 μB . Longitudinal-mode magnetic excitations may be observable in single crystalline CrVMoO7.
Lee, Kyuhyun; Youn, Yong; Han, Seungwu
2017-01-01
Abstract We identify ground-state collinear spin ordering in various antiferromagnetic transition metal oxides by constructing the Ising model from first-principles results and applying a genetic algorithm to find its minimum energy state. The present method can correctly reproduce the ground state of well-known antiferromagnetic oxides such as NiO, Fe2O3, Cr2O3 and MnO2. Furthermore, we identify the ground-state spin ordering in more complicated materials such as Mn3O4 and CoCr2O4. PMID:28458746
Probing the antiferromagnetic long-range order with Glauber spin states
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Cabrera, Guillermo G.
1994-01-01
It is well known that the ground state of low-dimensional antiferromagnets deviates from Neel states due to strong quantum fluctuations. Even in the presence of long-range order, those fluctuations produce a substantial reduction of the magnetic moment from its saturation value. Numerical simulations in anisotropic antiferromagnetic chains suggest that quantum fluctuations over Neel order appear in the form of localized reversal of pairs of neighboring spins. In this paper, we propose a coherent state representation for the ground state to describe the above situation. In the one-dimensional case, our wave function corresponds to a two-mode Glauber state, when the Neel state is used as a reference, while the boson fields are associated to coherent flip of spin pairs. The coherence manifests itself through the antiferromagnetic long-range order that survives the action of quantum fluctuations. The present representation is different from the standard zero-point spin wave state, and is asymptotically exact in the limit of strong anisotropy. The fermionic version of the theory, obtained through the Jordan-Wigner transformation, is also investigated.
Ground-state candidate for the classical dipolar kagome Ising antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chioar, I. A.; Rougemaille, N.; Canals, B.
2016-06-01
We have investigated the low-temperature thermodynamic properties of the classical dipolar kagome Ising antiferromagnet using Monte Carlo simulations, in the quest for the ground-state manifold. In spite of the limitations of a single-spin-flip approach, we managed to identify certain ordering patterns in the low-temperature regime and we propose a candidate for this unknown state. This configuration presents some intriguing features and is fully compatible with the extrapolations of the at-equilibrium thermodynamic behavior sampled so far, making it a very likely choice for the dipolar long-range ordered state of the classical kagome Ising antiferromagnet.
Jiang, Hong-Min
2012-09-26
Based on an effective two-orbital tight-binding model, we examine the possible superconducting states in iron-vacancy-ordered A(y)Fe(2-x)Se(2). In the presence of ordered vacancies and blocked antiferromagnetic order, it is shown that the emergent SC pairing is the nodeless next-nearest-neighbor (NNN)-pairing due to the dominant antiferromagnetic (AFM) interaction between the inter-block NNN sites. In particular, we show that due to the ordered vacancies and the associated blocked AFM order, the interplay between the superconducting and AFM states results in three distinct states in the phase diagram as doping is varied. The divergent experimental observations can be accounted for by considering the different charge carrier concentrations in their respective compounds.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fallarino, Lorenzo; Berger, Andreas; Binek, Christian
2015-02-01
A Landau-theoretical approach is utilized to model the magnetic field induced reversal of the antiferromagnetic order parameter in thin films of magnetoelectric antiferromagnets. A key ingredient of this peculiar switching phenomenon is the presence of a robust spin polarized state at the surface of the antiferromagnetic films. Surface or boundary magnetization is symmetry allowed in magnetoelectric antiferromagnets and experimentally established for chromia thin films. It couples rigidly to the antiferromagnetic order parameter and its Zeeman energy creates a pathway to switch the antiferromagnet via magnetic field application. In the framework of a minimalist Landau free energy expansion, the temperature dependence of the switching field and the field dependence of the transition width are derived. Least-squares fits to magnetometry data of (0001 ) textured chromia thin films strongly support this model of the magnetic reversal mechanism.
Competing antiferromagnetism in a quasi-2D itinerant ferromagnet: Fe 3GeTe 2
Yi, Jieyu; Zhuang, Houlong; Zou, Qiang; ...
2016-11-15
Fe 3GeTe 2 is known as an air-stable layered metal with itinerant ferromagnetism with a transition temperature of about 220 K. From extensive dc and ac magnetic measurements, we have determined that the ferromagnetic layers of Fe 3GeTe 2 order antiferromagnetically along the c-axis blow 152 K. The antiferromagnetic state was further substantiated by theoretical calculation to be the ground state. A magnetic structure model was proposed to describe the antiferromagnetic ground state as well as competition between antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic states. Furthermore, Fe 3GeTe 2 shares many common features with pnictide superconductors and may be a promising system inmore » which to search for unconventional superconductivity.« less
Li, Shichao; Gan, Yuan; Wang, Jinghui; ...
2017-09-06
Here, we combined elastic and inelastic neutron scattering techniques, magnetic susceptibility, and resistivity measurements to study single-crystal samples of K xFe 2-ySe 2, which contain the superconducting phase that has a transition temperature of ~31 K. In the inelastic neutron scattering measurements, we also observe both the spin-wave excitations resulting from the block antiferromagnetic ordered phase and the resonance that is associated with the superconductivity in the superconducting phase, demonstrating the coexistence of these two orders. From the temperature dependence of the intensity of the magnetic Bragg peaks, we find that well before entering the superconducting state, the development ofmore » the magnetic order is interrupted, at ~42 K. We consider this result to be evidence for the physical separation of the antiferromagnetic and superconducting phases; the suppression is possibly due to the proximity effect of the superconducting fluctuations on the antiferromagnetic order.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Li, Shichao; Gan, Yuan; Wang, Jinghui
Here, we combined elastic and inelastic neutron scattering techniques, magnetic susceptibility, and resistivity measurements to study single-crystal samples of K xFe 2-ySe 2, which contain the superconducting phase that has a transition temperature of ~31 K. In the inelastic neutron scattering measurements, we also observe both the spin-wave excitations resulting from the block antiferromagnetic ordered phase and the resonance that is associated with the superconductivity in the superconducting phase, demonstrating the coexistence of these two orders. From the temperature dependence of the intensity of the magnetic Bragg peaks, we find that well before entering the superconducting state, the development ofmore » the magnetic order is interrupted, at ~42 K. We consider this result to be evidence for the physical separation of the antiferromagnetic and superconducting phases; the suppression is possibly due to the proximity effect of the superconducting fluctuations on the antiferromagnetic order.« less
Magnetic structures of REPdBi half-Heusler bismuthides (RE = Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pavlosiuk, Orest; Fabreges, Xavier; Gukasov, Arsen; Meven, Martin; Kaczorowski, Dariusz; Wiśniewski, Piotr
2018-05-01
We present results of neutron diffraction on single crystals of several equiatomic ternary compounds of rare-earth elements with palladium and bismuth, crystallizing with cubic MgAgAs-type structure (half-Heusler phases). Band structure calculations showed that many members of that family possess electronic band inversion, which may lead to occurrence of topological insulator or topological semimetal. But even for the compounds without intrinsic band inversion another way of topologically non-trivial state realization, through a specific antiferromagnetic order, has been theoretically proposed. Our results show that the antiferromagnetic structures of all studied bismuthides are characterized by the propagation vector, allowing for antiferromagnetic topological insulator state. Therefore, the antiferromagnetic representatives of half-Heusler family are excellent candidates for extended investigations of coexistence of superconductivity, magnetic order and non-trivial topology of electronic states.
Antiferromagnetic Order in Epitaxial FeSe Films on SrTiO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhou, Y.; Miao, L.; Wang, P.; Zhu, F. F.; Jiang, W. X.; Jiang, S. W.; Zhang, Y.; Lei, B.; Chen, X. H.; Ding, H. F.; Zheng, Hao; Zhang, W. T.; Jia, Jin-feng; Qian, Dong; Wu, D.
2018-03-01
Single monolayer FeSe film grown on a Nb-doped SrTiO3 (001 ) substrate shows the highest superconducting transition temperature (TC˜100 K ) among the iron-based superconductors (iron pnictides), while the TC value of bulk FeSe is only ˜8 K . Although bulk FeSe does not show antiferromagnetic order, calculations suggest that the parent FeSe /SrTi O3 films are antiferromagnetic. Experimentally, because of a lack of a direct probe, the magnetic state of FeSe /SrTi O3 films remains mysterious. Here, we report direct evidence of antiferromagnetic order in the parent FeSe /SrTi O3 films by the magnetic exchange bias effect measurements. The magnetic blocking temperature is ˜140 K for a single monolayer film. The antiferromagnetic order disappears after electron doping.
Magnetic ground state of the layered honeycomb compound Na2Co2TeO6
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bera, A. K.; Yusuf, S. M.
2018-04-01
The magnetic correlations in the 2D layered honeycomb compound Na2Co2TeO6 has been investigated. The temperature dependent susceptibility curve reveals a transition to the magnetically ordered state at TN ˜ 25 K. The temperature dependent neutron diffraction study confirms an antiferromagnetic ordering below TN. The magnetic ground state is determined to be a zigzag antiferromagnet that appears due to competing exchange interactions beyond nearest neighbors. The moments align along the crystallographic b axis with reduced ordered magnetic moment values of 2.72(2) μB/Co2+ and 2.52(3) μB/Co2+ for two Co sites, respectively. In comparison to the theoretical phase diagram the determined zigzag antiferromagnetic ground state suggests that the compound Na2Co2TeO6 is situated in the proximity to the quantum spin liquid state in the phase diagram.
Ferro- and antiferro-magnetism in (Np, Pu)BC
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Klimczuk, T.; Shick, A. B.; Kozub, A. L.; Griveau, J.-C.; Colineau, E.; Falmbigl, M.; Wastin, F.; Rogl, P.
2015-04-01
Two new transuranium metal boron carbides, NpBC and PuBC, have been synthesized. Rietveld refinements of powder XRD patterns of {Np,Pu}BC confirmed in both cases isotypism with the structure type of UBC. Temperature dependent magnetic susceptibility data reveal antiferromagnetic ordering for PuBC below TN = 44 K, whereas ferromagnetic ordering was found for NpBC below TC = 61 K. Heat capacity measurements prove the bulk character of the observed magnetic transition for both compounds. The total energy electronic band structure calculations support formation of the ferromagnetic ground state for NpBC and the antiferromagnetic ground state for PuBC.
Electronic properties of GdxBi2-xSe3 single crystals analyzed by Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kim, Soo-Whan; Jung, Myung-Hwa
2018-05-01
Magnetically doped topological insulators have been significantly researched for unlocking the nontrivial topological phases and the resultant potential applications for spintronics. We report the effect of antiferromagnetic order induced by Gd substitution on the electronic properties of GdxBi2-xSe3 single crystals by analyzing the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations. Antiferromagnetic order of Gd ions affects the 2D surface state in Bi2Se3 and changes the effective mass and lifetime of charge carriers. These observations suggest a strong correlation of 2D surface electrons with the antiferromagnetic ordering, where the itinerant electrons are bound to the Gd ions to mediate the antiferromagnetic interaction.
Magnetic order induces symmetry breaking in the single-crystalline orthorhombic CuMnAs semimetal
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Emmanouilidou, Eve; Cao, Huibo; Tang, Peizhe
2017-12-04
Recently, orthorhombic CuMnAs has been proposed to be a magnetic material where topological fermions exist around the Fermi level. Here we report the magnetic structure of the orthorhombic Cu 0.95MnAs and Cu 0.98Mn 0.96As single crystals. While Cu 0.95MnAs is a commensurate antiferromagnet below 360 K with a propagation vector of k = 0,Cu 0.98Mn 0.96As undergoes a second-order paramagnetic to incommensurate antiferromagnetic phase transition at 320 K with k = (0.1,0,0), followed by a second-order incommensurate to commensurate antiferromagnetic phase transition at 230 K. In the commensurate antiferromagnetic state, the Mn spins order parallel to the crystallographic b axismore » but antiparallel to their nearest neighbors, with the spin orientation along the b axis. This magnetic order breaks S 2z, the two-fold rotational symmetry around the c axis, resulting in finite band gaps at the crossing point and the disappearance of the massless topological fermions. Furthermore, our first-principles calculations suggest that orthorhombic CuMnAs can still host spin-polarized surface states and signature induced by nontrivial topology, which makes it a promising candidate for antiferromagnetic spintronics.« less
Superconductivity in the vicinity of antiferromagnetic order in CrAs.
Wu, Wei; Cheng, Jinguang; Matsubayashi, Kazuyuki; Kong, Panpan; Lin, Fukun; Jin, Changqing; Wang, Nanlin; Uwatoko, Yoshiya; Luo, Jianlin
2014-11-19
One of the common features of unconventional superconducting systems such as the heavy-fermion, high transition-temperature cuprate and iron-pnictide superconductors is that the superconductivity emerges in the vicinity of long-range antiferromagnetically ordered state. In addition to doping charge carriers, the application of external pressure is an effective and clean approach to induce unconventional superconductivity near a magnetic quantum critical point. Here we report on the discovery of superconductivity on the verge of antiferromagnetic order in CrAs via the application of external pressure. Bulk superconductivity with Tc≈2 K emerges at the critical pressure Pc≈8 kbar, where the first-order antiferromagnetic transition at T(N)≈265 K under ambient pressure is completely suppressed. The close proximity of superconductivity to an antiferromagnetic order suggests an unconventional pairing mechanism for CrAs. The present finding opens a new avenue for searching novel superconductors in the Cr and other transition metal-based systems.
Xiong, Jie; Yan, Jiaqiang; Aczel, Adam A.; ...
2017-12-02
The structural, electrical, and magnetic properties of the double perovskite Ba 2LuReO 6 have been examined in this paper. It is an insulator whose temperature dependent conductivity is consistent with variable range hopping electrical transport. A transition to an antiferromagnet state with type I order occurs below T N = 31 K. High resolution time-of-flight neutron powder diffraction measurements show that it retains the cubic double perovskite structure down to 10 K. High intensity, low resolution neutron powder diffraction measurements confirm the antiferromagnetic order and indicate that cubic symmetry is still observed at 1.5 K. The small ordered moment ofmore » 0.34(4)μ B per Re is comparable to estimates of moments on 5d 2 ions in other antiferromagnetically ordered cubic double perovskites. Finally, comparisons with related double perovskites containing 5d 2 ions, such as Os 6+ and Re 5+, reveal that subtle changes in structure or electron configuration of the diamagnetic octahedral cations can have a large impact on the magnetic ground state, the size of the ordered moment, and the Néel temperature.« less
Spin-isotropic continuum of spin excitations in antiferromagnetically ordered Fe1.07Te
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Song, Yu; Lu, Xingye; Regnault, L.-P.; Su, Yixi; Lai, Hsin-Hua; Hu, Wen-Jun; Si, Qimiao; Dai, Pengcheng
2018-02-01
Unconventional superconductivity typically emerges in the presence of quasidegenerate ground states, and the associated intense fluctuations are likely responsible for generating the superconducting state. Here we use polarized neutron scattering to study the spin space anisotropy of spin excitations in Fe1.07Te exhibiting bicollinear antiferromagnetic (AF) order, the parent compound of FeTe1 -xSex superconductors. We confirm that the low-energy spin excitations are transverse spin waves, consistent with a local-moment origin of the bicollinear AF order. While the ordered moments lie in the a b plane in Fe1.07Te , it takes less energy for them to fluctuate out of plane, similar to BaFe2As2 and NaFeAs. At energies above E ≳20 meV, we find magnetic scattering to be dominated by an isotropic continuum that persists up to at least 50 meV. Although the isotropic spin excitations cannot be ascribed to spin waves from a long-range-ordered local-moment antiferromagnet, the continuum can result from the bicollinear magnetic order ground state of Fe1.07Te being quasidegenerate with plaquette magnetic order.
High-spin ribbons and antiferromagnetic ordering of a Mn(II)-biradical-Mn(II) complex.
Fatila, Elisabeth M; Clérac, Rodolphe; Rouzières, Mathieu; Soldatov, Dmitriy V; Jennings, Michael; Preuss, Kathryn E
2013-09-11
A binuclear metal coordination complex of the first thiazyl-based biradical ligand 1 is reported (1 = 4,6-bis(1,2,3,5-dithiadiazolyl)pyrimidine; hfac =1,1,1,5,5,5,-hexafluoroacetylacetonato-). The Mn(hfac)2-biradical-Mn(hfac)2 complex 2 is a rare example of a discrete, molecular species employing a neutral bridging biradical ligand. It is soluble in common organic solvents and can be easily sublimed as a crystalline solid. Complex 2 has a spin ground state of S(T) = 4 resulting from antiferromagnetic coupling between the S(birad) = 1 biradical bridging ligand and two S(Mn) = 5/2 Mn(II) ions. Electrostatic contacts between atoms with large spin density promote a ferromagnetic arrangement of the moments of neighboring complexes in ribbon-like arrays. Weak antiferromagnetic coupling between these high-spin ribbons stabilizes an ordered antiferromagnetic ground state below 4.5 K. This is an unusual example of magnetic ordering in a molecular metal-radical complex, wherein the electrostatic contacts that direct the crystal packing are also responsible for providing an efficient exchange coupling pathway between molecules.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Song, Yu; Yamani, Zahra; Cao, Chongde
Iron-based superconductivity develops near an antiferromagnetic order and out of a bad-metal normal state, which has been interpreted as originating from a proximate Mott transition. Whether an actual Mott insulator can be realized in the phase diagram of the iron pnictides remains an open question. Here we use transport, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, resonant inelastic X-ray scattering and neutron scattering to demonstrate that NaFe 1-xCu xAs near x≈0.5 exhibits real space Fe and Cu ordering, and are antiferromagnetic insulators with the insulating behaviour persisting above the Néel temperature, indicative of a Mott insulator. On decreasing x from 0.5,more » the antiferromagnetic-ordered moment continuously decreases, yielding to superconductivity ~x=0.05. Our discovery of a Mott-insulating state in NaFe 1-xCu xAs thus makes it the only known Fe-based material, in which superconductivity can be smoothly connected to the Mott-insulating state, highlighting the important role of electron correlations in the high-T c superconductivity.« less
Coexistence of charge order and antiferromagnetism in (TMTTF)2SbF6: NMR study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nomura, K.; Yamamoto, M.; Matsunaga, N.; Hirose, S.; Shimohara, N.; Satoh, T.; Isome, T.; Liu, Y.; Kawamoto, A.
2015-03-01
The electronic state of (TMTTF)2SbF6 was investigated by the 1H and 13C NMR measurements. The temperature dependence of T1-1 in 1H NMR shows a sharp peak associated with the antiferromagnetic transition at TAF=6 K. The temperature dependence of T1-1 is described by the power law T2.4 below TAF. This suggests the nodal gapless spin wave excitation in antiferromagnetic phase. In 13C NMR, two sharp peaks at high temperature region, associated with the inner and the outer carbon sites in TMTTF dimer, split into four peaks below 150 K. It indicates that the charge disproportionation occurs. The degree of charge disproportionation Δρ is estimated as (0.25±0.09)e from the chemical shift difference. This value of Δρ is consistent with that obtained from the infrared spectroscopy. In the antiferromagnetic state (AFI), the observed line shape is well fitted by eight Lorentzian peaks. This suggests that the charge order with the same degree still remains in the AF state. From the line assignment, the AF staggered spin amplitude is obtained as 0.70 μB and 0.24 μB at the charge rich and the poor sites, respectively. These values corresponding to almost 1 μB per dimer are quite different from 0.11 μB of another AF (AFII) state in (TMTTF)2Br with effective higher pressure. As a result, it is understood that the antiferromagnetic staggered spin order is stabilized on the CO state in the AFI phase of (TMTTF)2SbF6.
Impurity effects in highly frustrated diamond-lattice antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Savary, Lucile; Gull, Emanuel; Trebst, Simon; Alicea, Jason; Bergman, Doron; Balents, Leon
2011-08-01
We consider the effects of local impurities in highly frustrated diamond-lattice antiferromagnets, which exhibit large but nonextensive ground-state degeneracies. Such models are appropriate to many A-site magnetic spinels. We argue very generally that sufficiently dilute impurities induce an ordered magnetic ground state and provide a mechanism of degeneracy breaking. The states that are selected can be determined by a “swiss cheese model” analysis, which we demonstrate numerically for a particular impurity model in this case. Moreover, we present criteria for estimating the stability of the resulting ordered phase to a competing frozen (spin glass) one. The results may explain the contrasting finding of frozen and ordered ground states in CoAl2O4 and MnSc2S4, respectively.
Impurity Effects in Highly Frustrated Diamond-Lattice Antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Savary, Lucile
2012-02-01
We consider the effects of local impurities in highly frustrated diamond lattice antiferromagnets, which exhibit large but non-extensive ground state degeneracies. Such models are appropriate to many A-site magnetic spinels. We argue very generally that sufficiently dilute impurities induce an ordered magnetic ground state, and provide a mechanism of degeneracy breaking. The states which are selected can be determined by a ``swiss cheese model'' analysis, which we demonstrate numerically for a particular impurity model in this case. Moreover, we present criteria for estimating the stability of the resulting ordered phase to a competing frozen (spin glass) one. The results may explain the contrasting finding of frozen and ordered ground states in CoAl2O4 and MnSc2S4, respectively.
Excitonic Order and Superconductivity in the Two-Orbital Hubbard Model: Variational Cluster Approach
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fujiuchi, Ryo; Sugimoto, Koudai; Ohta, Yukinori
2018-06-01
Using the variational cluster approach based on the self-energy functional theory, we study the possible occurrence of excitonic order and superconductivity in the two-orbital Hubbard model with intra- and inter-orbital Coulomb interactions. It is known that an antiferromagnetic Mott insulator state appears in the regime of strong intra-orbital interaction, a band insulator state appears in the regime of strong inter-orbital interaction, and an excitonic insulator state appears between them. In addition to these states, we find that the s±-wave superconducting state appears in the small-correlation regime, and the dx2 - y2-wave superconducting state appears on the boundary of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulator state. We calculate the single-particle spectral function of the model and compare the band gap formation due to the superconducting and excitonic orders.
Perspectives of antiferromagnetic spintronics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jungfleisch, Matthias B.; Zhang, Wei; Hoffmann, Axel
2018-04-01
Antiferromagnets are promising for future spintronic applications owing to their advantageous properties: They are magnetically ordered, but neighboring magnetic moments point in opposite directions, which results in zero net magnetization. This means antiferromagnets produce no stray fields and are insensitive to external magnetic field perturbations. Furthermore, they show intrinsic high frequency dynamics, exhibit considerable spin-orbit and magneto-transport effects. Over the past decade, it has been realized that antiferromagnets have more to offer than just being utilized as passive components in exchange bias applications. This development resulted in a paradigm shift, which opens the pathway to novel concepts using antiferromagnets for spin-based technologies and applications. This article gives a broad perspective on antiferromagnetic spintronics. In particular, the manipulation and detection of antiferromagnetic states by spintronics effects, as well as spin transport and dynamics in antiferromagnetic materials will be discussed. We will also outline current challenges and future research directions in this emerging field.
Pressure-induced quantum phase transition in the quantum antiferromagnet CsFeCl3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hayashida, Shohei; Zaharko, Oksana; Kurita, Nobuyuki; Tanaka, Hidekazu; Hagihala, Masato; Soda, Minoru; Itoh, Shinichi; Uwatoko, Yoshiya; Masuda, Takatsugu
2018-04-01
We have studied the pressure-induced quantum phase transition in the singlet-ground-state antiferromagnet CsFeCl3. Neutron diffraction experiments under pressure evidence the magnetic long-range order at low temperatures. Magnetic structure analysis reveals a 120∘ structure with a propagation vector of kmag=(1 /3 ,1 /3 ,0 ) . The estimated critical exponent of the order parameter suggests that CsFeCl3 belongs to the universality class of U (1 ) ×Z2 symmetry which is expected to realize the chiral liquid state.
Tunable Noncollinear Antiferromagnetic Resistive Memory through Oxide Superlattice Design
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hoffman, Jason D.; Wu, Stephen M.; Kirby, Brian J.; Bhattacharya, Anand
2018-04-01
Antiferromagnets (AFMs) have recently gathered a large amount of attention as a potential replacement for ferromagnets (FMs) in spintronic devices due to their lack of stray magnetic fields, invisibility to external magnetic probes, and faster magnetization dynamics. Their development into a practical technology, however, has been hampered by the small number of materials where the antiferromagnetic state can be both controlled and read out. We show that by relaxing the strict criterion on pure antiferromagnetism, we can engineer an alternative class of magnetic materials that overcome these limitations. This is accomplished by stabilizing a noncollinear magnetic phase in LaNiO3 /La2 /3Sr1 /3MnO3 superlattices. This state can be continuously tuned between AFM and FM coupling through varying the superlattice spacing, strain, applied magnetic field, or temperature. By using this alternative "knob" to tune magnetic ordering, we take a nanoscale materials-by-design approach to engineering ferromagneticlike controllability into antiferromagnetic synthetic magnetic structures. This approach can be used to trade-off between the favorable and unfavorable properties of FMs and AFMs when designing realistic resistive antiferromagnetic memories. We demonstrate a memory device in one such superlattice, where the magnetic state of the noncollinear antiferromagnet is reversibly switched between different orientations using a small magnetic field and read out in real time with anisotropic magnetoresistance measurements.
Ferrian Ilmenites: Investigating the Magnetic Phase Diagram
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lagroix, F.
2007-12-01
The main objective of this study is to investigate the magnetic phase changes within the hematite-ilmenite solid solution, yFeTiO3·(1-y)·Fe2O3. Two sets of synthetic ferrian ilmenites of y-values equal to 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, and 1.0 were available for this study. As currently drawn, the magnetic phase diagram, proposed by Ishikawa et al. [1985, J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. v.54, 312-325], predicts for increasing y values (0.5
Long-Range Anti-ferromagnetic Order in Sm2Ti2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mauws, Cole; Sarte, Paul; Hallas, Alannah; Wildes, Andrew; Quilliam, Jeffrey; Luke, Graeme; Gaulin, Bruce; Wiebe, Christopher
The spin ice state has been a key topic in frustrated magnetism for decades. Largely due to the presence of monopole-like excitations, leading to interesting physics. There has been a consistent effort in the field at synthesising new spin ice phases that possess smaller moments in the hopes of increasing the density of magnetic monopoles. As well as investigating the phase when quantum fluctuations dominate over dipolar interactions. Initially Sm2Ti2O7 was thought to be a candidate for a quantum spin ice, possessing a low moment of 1.5 μB in the high-spin case and crystal fields may reduce it to a true spin-1/2 system. However anti-ferromagnetic interactions as well as a lambda-like heat capacity anomaly pointed towards long-range antiferromagnetic order. An isotopically enriched samarium-154 single crystal was taken to the D7 polarized diffuse scattering spectrometer at the ILL. Long-range antiferromagnetic order was observed and indexed onto the all-in all-out structure. This agrees with theoretical predictions of Ising pyrochlore systems with sufficiently large anti-ferromagnetic coupling. NSERC, CFI, CIFAR, CRC.
Coexistence of long-range cycloidal order and spin-cluster glass state in the multiferroic BaYFeO4.
Ghara, Somnath; Sundaresan, A
2018-06-20
We report the presence of spin glass state below the cycloidal spin ordering in the multiferroic BaYFeO 4 . This compound is known to crystallize in an orthorhombic structure with a centrosymmetric space group Pnma and exhibits two successive antiferromagnetic phase transitions. Upon cooling, it undergoes a spin density wave (SDW)-like antiferromagnetic ordering at T N1 ~ 48 K and a cycloidal ordering at T N2 ~ 35 K. Using dc magnetic memory effect and magnetization relaxation studies, we have shown that this oxide undergoes a reentrant spin glass transition below T * ~ 17 K. Our analysis suggests the presence of spin clusters in the glassy state. The coexistence of spin-cluster glass and long-range cycloidal ordered states results in an exchange bias effect at 2 K. The origin of the glassy state has been attributed to freezing of some Fe 3+ moments, which do not participate in the long-range ordering.
Coexistence of long-range cycloidal order and spin-cluster glass state in the multiferroic BaYFeO4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghara, Somnath; Sundaresan, A.
2018-06-01
We report the presence of spin glass state below the cycloidal spin ordering in the multiferroic BaYFeO4. This compound is known to crystallize in an orthorhombic structure with a centrosymmetric space group Pnma and exhibits two successive antiferromagnetic phase transitions. Upon cooling, it undergoes a spin density wave (SDW)-like antiferromagnetic ordering at T N1 ~ 48 K and a cycloidal ordering at T N2 ~ 35 K. Using dc magnetic memory effect and magnetization relaxation studies, we have shown that this oxide undergoes a reentrant spin glass transition below T * ~ 17 K. Our analysis suggests the presence of spin clusters in the glassy state. The coexistence of spin-cluster glass and long-range cycloidal ordered states results in an exchange bias effect at 2 K. The origin of the glassy state has been attributed to freezing of some Fe3+ moments, which do not participate in the long-range ordering.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Xiong, Jie; Yan, Jiaqiang; Aczel, Adam A.
The structural, electrical, and magnetic properties of the double perovskite Ba 2LuReO 6 have been examined in this paper. It is an insulator whose temperature dependent conductivity is consistent with variable range hopping electrical transport. A transition to an antiferromagnet state with type I order occurs below T N = 31 K. High resolution time-of-flight neutron powder diffraction measurements show that it retains the cubic double perovskite structure down to 10 K. High intensity, low resolution neutron powder diffraction measurements confirm the antiferromagnetic order and indicate that cubic symmetry is still observed at 1.5 K. The small ordered moment ofmore » 0.34(4)μ B per Re is comparable to estimates of moments on 5d 2 ions in other antiferromagnetically ordered cubic double perovskites. Finally, comparisons with related double perovskites containing 5d 2 ions, such as Os 6+ and Re 5+, reveal that subtle changes in structure or electron configuration of the diamagnetic octahedral cations can have a large impact on the magnetic ground state, the size of the ordered moment, and the Néel temperature.« less
Dipolar order by disorder in the classical Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the kagome lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chern, Gia-Wei
2014-03-01
The first experiments on the ``kagome bilayer'' SCGO triggered a wave of interest in kagome antiferromagnets in particular, and frustrated systems in general. A cluster of early seminal theoretical papers established kagome magnets as model systems for novel ordering phenomena, discussing in particular spin liquidity, partial order, disorder-free glassiness and order by disorder. Despite significant recent progress in understanding the ground state for the quantum S = 1 / 2 model, the nature of the low-temperature phase for the classical kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet has remained a mystery: the non-linear nature of the fluctuations around the exponentially numerous harmonically degenerate ground states has not permitted a controlled theory, while its complex energy landscape has precluded numerical simulations at low temperature. Here we present an efficient Monte Carlo algorithm which removes the latter obstacle. Our simulations detect a low-temperature regime in which correlations saturate at a remarkably small value. Feeding these results into an effective model and analyzing the results in the framework of an appropriate field theory implies the presence of long-range dipolar spin order with a tripled unit cell.
A Mott insulator continuously connected to iron pnictide superconductors
Song, Yu; Yamani, Zahra; Cao, Chongde; ...
2016-12-19
Iron-based superconductivity develops near an antiferromagnetic order and out of a bad-metal normal state, which has been interpreted as originating from a proximate Mott transition. Whether an actual Mott insulator can be realized in the phase diagram of the iron pnictides remains an open question. Here we use transport, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, resonant inelastic X-ray scattering and neutron scattering to demonstrate that NaFe 1-xCu xAs near x≈0.5 exhibits real space Fe and Cu ordering, and are antiferromagnetic insulators with the insulating behaviour persisting above the Néel temperature, indicative of a Mott insulator. On decreasing x from 0.5,more » the antiferromagnetic-ordered moment continuously decreases, yielding to superconductivity ~x=0.05. Our discovery of a Mott-insulating state in NaFe 1-xCu xAs thus makes it the only known Fe-based material, in which superconductivity can be smoothly connected to the Mott-insulating state, highlighting the important role of electron correlations in the high-T c superconductivity.« less
A Mott insulator continuously connected to iron pnictide superconductors
Song, Yu; Yamani, Zahra; Cao, Chongde; Li, Yu; Zhang, Chenglin; Chen, Justin S.; Huang, Qingzhen; Wu, Hui; Tao, Jing; Zhu, Yimei; Tian, Wei; Chi, Songxue; Cao, Huibo; Huang, Yao-Bo; Dantz, Marcus; Schmitt, Thorsten; Yu, Rong; Nevidomskyy, Andriy H.; Morosan, Emilia; Si, Qimiao; Dai, Pengcheng
2016-01-01
Iron-based superconductivity develops near an antiferromagnetic order and out of a bad-metal normal state, which has been interpreted as originating from a proximate Mott transition. Whether an actual Mott insulator can be realized in the phase diagram of the iron pnictides remains an open question. Here we use transport, transmission electron microscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, resonant inelastic X-ray scattering and neutron scattering to demonstrate that NaFe1−xCuxAs near x≈0.5 exhibits real space Fe and Cu ordering, and are antiferromagnetic insulators with the insulating behaviour persisting above the Néel temperature, indicative of a Mott insulator. On decreasing x from 0.5, the antiferromagnetic-ordered moment continuously decreases, yielding to superconductivity ∼x=0.05. Our discovery of a Mott-insulating state in NaFe1−xCuxAs thus makes it the only known Fe-based material, in which superconductivity can be smoothly connected to the Mott-insulating state, highlighting the important role of electron correlations in the high-Tc superconductivity. PMID:27991514
Order by disorder and gaugelike degeneracy in a quantum pyrochlore antiferromagnet.
Henley, Christopher L
2006-02-03
The (three-dimensional) pyrochlore lattice antiferromagnet with Heisenberg spins of large spin length S is a highly frustrated model with a macroscopic degeneracy of classical ground states. The zero-point energy of (harmonic-order) spin-wave fluctuations distinguishes a subset of these states. I derive an approximate but illuminating effective Hamiltonian, acting within the subspace of Ising spin configurations representing the collinear ground states. It consists of products of Ising spins around loops, i.e., has the form of a Z2 lattice gauge theory. The remaining ground-state entropy is still infinite but not extensive, being O(L) for system size O(L3). All these ground states have unit cells bigger than those considered previously.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Modic, K. A.; Ramshaw, Brad J.; Betts, J. B.
Here, the complex antiferromagnetic orders observed in the honeycomb iridates are a double-edged sword in the search for a quantum spin-liquid: both attesting that the magnetic interactions provide many of the necessary ingredients, while simultaneously impeding access. Focus has naturally been drawn to the unusual magnetic orders that hint at the underlying spin correlations. However, the study of any particular broken symmetry state generally provides little clue about the possibility of other nearby ground states. Here we use magnetic fields approaching 100 Tesla to reveal the extent of the spin correlations in γ-lithium iridate. We find that a small componentmore » of field along the magnetic easy-axis melts long-range order, revealing a bistable, strongly correlated spin state. Far from the usual destruction of antiferromagnetism via spin polarization, the high-field state possesses only a small fraction of the total iridium moment, without evidence for long-range order up to the highest attainable magnetic fields.« less
Okuma, Nobuyuki
2017-09-08
We generalize the concept of the spin-momentum locking to magnonic systems and derive the formula to calculate the spin expectation value for one-magnon states of general two-body spin Hamiltonians. We give no-go conditions for magnon spin to be independent of momentum. As examples of the magnon spin-momentum locking, we analyze a one-dimensional antiferromagnet with the Néel order and two-dimensional kagome lattice antiferromagnets with the 120° structure. We find that the magnon spin depends on its momentum even when the Hamiltonian has the z-axis spin rotational symmetry, which can be explained in the context of a singular band point or a U(1) symmetry breaking. A spin vortex in momentum space generated in a kagome lattice antiferromagnet has the winding number Q=-2, while the typical one observed in topological insulator surface states is characterized by Q=+1. A magnonic analogue of the surface states, the Dirac magnon with Q=+1, is found in another kagome lattice antiferromagnet. We also derive the sum rule for Q by using the Poincaré-Hopf index theorem.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Okuma, Nobuyuki
2017-09-01
We generalize the concept of the spin-momentum locking to magnonic systems and derive the formula to calculate the spin expectation value for one-magnon states of general two-body spin Hamiltonians. We give no-go conditions for magnon spin to be independent of momentum. As examples of the magnon spin-momentum locking, we analyze a one-dimensional antiferromagnet with the Néel order and two-dimensional kagome lattice antiferromagnets with the 120° structure. We find that the magnon spin depends on its momentum even when the Hamiltonian has the z -axis spin rotational symmetry, which can be explained in the context of a singular band point or a U (1 ) symmetry breaking. A spin vortex in momentum space generated in a kagome lattice antiferromagnet has the winding number Q =-2 , while the typical one observed in topological insulator surface states is characterized by Q =+1 . A magnonic analogue of the surface states, the Dirac magnon with Q =+1 , is found in another kagome lattice antiferromagnet. We also derive the sum rule for Q by using the Poincaré-Hopf index theorem.
Henriques, M.S.; Gorbunov, D.I.; Kriegner, D.; Vališka, M.; Andreev, A.V.; Matěj, Z.
2018-01-01
Structural changes through the first-order paramagnetic-antiferromagnetic phase transition of Dy3Ru4Al12 at 7 K have been studied by means of X-ray diffraction and thermal expansion measurements. The compound crystallizes in a hexagonal crystal structure of Gd3Ru4Al12 type (P63/mmc space group), and no structural phase transition has been found in the temperature interval between 2.5 and 300 K. Nevertheless, due to the spin-lattice coupling the crystal volume undergoes a small orthorhombic distortion of the order of 2×10-5 as the compound enters the antiferromagnetic state. We propose that the first-order phase transition is not driven by the structural changes but rather by the exchange interactions present in the system. PMID:29445250
Taskin, A A; Lavrov, A N; Ando, Yoichi
2003-06-06
In RBaCo2O5+x compounds (R is rare earth), a ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic competition is accompanied by a giant magnetoresistance. We study the magnetization of detwinned GdBaCo2O5.5 single crystals and find a remarkable uniaxial anisotropy of Co3+ spins which is tightly linked with the chain oxygen ordering in GdO0.5 planes. Reflecting the underlying oxygen order, CoO2 planes also develop a spin-state order consisting of Co3+ ions in alternating rows of S=1 and S=0 states. The magnetic structure appears to be composed of weakly coupled ferromagnetic ladders with Ising-like moments, which gives a simple picture for magnetotransport phenomena.
Doping Evolution of Magnetic Order and Magnetic Excitations in (Sr1 -xLax)3Ir2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lu, Xingye; McNally, D. E.; Moretti Sala, M.; Terzic, J.; Upton, M. H.; Casa, D.; Ingold, G.; Cao, G.; Schmitt, T.
2017-01-01
We use resonant elastic and inelastic x-ray scattering at the Ir-L3 edge to study the doping-dependent magnetic order, magnetic excitations, and spin-orbit excitons in the electron-doped bilayer iridate (Sr1 -xLax )3Ir2 O7 (0 ≤x ≤0.065 ). With increasing doping x , the three-dimensional long range antiferromagnetic order is gradually suppressed and evolves into a three-dimensional short range order across the insulator-to-metal transition from x =0 to 0.05, followed by a transition to two-dimensional short range order between x =0.05 and 0.065. Because of the interactions between the Jeff=1/2 pseudospins and the emergent itinerant electrons, magnetic excitations undergo damping, anisotropic softening, and gap collapse, accompanied by weakly doping-dependent spin-orbit excitons. Therefore, we conclude that electron doping suppresses the magnetic anisotropy and interlayer couplings and drives (Sr1 -xLax )3Ir2 O7 into a correlated metallic state with two-dimensional short range antiferromagnetic order. Strong antiferromagnetic fluctuations of the Jeff=1/2 moments persist deep in this correlated metallic state, with the magnon gap strongly suppressed.
Hidden order signatures in the antiferromagnetic phase of U (Ru1-xFex) 2Si2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Williams, T. J.; Aczel, A. A.; Stone, M. B.; Wilson, M. N.; Luke, G. M.
2017-03-01
We present a comprehensive set of elastic and inelastic neutron scattering measurements on a range of Fe-doped samples of U (Ru1-xFex) 2Si2 with 0.01 ≤x ≤0.15 . All of the samples measured exhibit long-range antiferromagnetic order, with the size of the magnetic moment quickly increasing to 0.51 μB at 2.5% doping and continuing to increase monotonically with doping, reaching 0.69 μB at 15% doping. Time-of-flight and inelastic triple-axis measurements show the existence of excitations at (1 0 0) and (1.4 0 0) in all samples, which are also observed in the parent compound. While the excitations in the 1% doping are quantitatively identical to the parent material, the gap and width of the excitations change rapidly at 2.5% Fe doping and above. The 1% doped sample shows evidence for a separation in temperature between the hidden order and antiferromagnetic transitions, suggesting that the antiferromagnetic state emerges at very low Fe dopings. The combined neutron scattering data suggest not only discontinuous changes in the magnetic moment and excitations between the hidden order and antiferromagnetic phases, but that these changes continue to evolve up to at least x =0.15 .
Magnetic structure of the antiferromagnetic Kondo lattice compounds CeRhAl 4Si 2 and CeIrAl 4Si 2
Ghimire, N. J.; Calder, S.; Janoschek, M.; ...
2015-06-01
In this article, we have investigated the magnetic ground state of the antiferromagnetic Kondo-lattice compounds CeMAl 4Si 2(M = Rh, Ir) using neutron powder diffraction. Although both of these compounds show two magnetic transitions T N1 and T N2 in the bulk properties measurements, evidence for magnetic long-range order was only found below the lower transition T N2. Analysis of the diffraction profiles reveals a commensurate antiferromagnetic structure with a propagation vector k = (0, 0, 1/2). The magnetic moment in the ordered state of CeRhAl 4Si 2 and CeIrAl 4Si 2 were determined to be 1.14(2) and 1.41(3) μB/Ce,more » respectively, and are parallel to the crystallographic c-axis in agreement with magnetic susceptibility measurements.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lebyodkin, M. A.; Lebedkina, T. A.; Shashkov, I. V.; Gornakov, V. S.
2017-07-01
Magnetization reversal of polycrystalline NiFe/NiO bilayers was investigated using magneto-optical indicator film imaging and acoustic emission techniques. Sporadic acoustic signals were detected in a constant magnetic field after the magnetization reversal. It is suggested that they are related to elastic waves excited by sharp shocks in the NiO layer with strong magnetostriction. Their probability depends on the history and number of repetitions of the field cycling, thus testifying the thermal-activation nature of the long-time relaxation of an antiferromagnetic order. These results provide evidence of spontaneous thermally activated switching of the antiferromagnetic order in NiO grains during magnetization reversal in ferromagnet/antiferromagnet (FM/AFM) heterostructures. The respective deformation modes are discussed in terms of the thermal fluctuation aftereffect in the Fulcomer and Charap model which predicts that irreversible breakdown of the original spin orientation can take place in some antiferromagnetic grains with disordered anisotropy axes during magnetization reversal of exchange-coupled FM/AFM structures. The spin reorientation in the saturated state may induce abrupt distortion of isolated metastable grains because of the NiO magnetostriction, leading to excitation of shock waves and formation of plate (or Lamb) waves.
Perspectives of antiferromagnetic spintronics
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jungfleisch, Matthias B.; Zhang, Wei; Hoffmann, Axel
2018-04-01
Antiferromagnets are promising for future spintronics applications owing to their interesting properties: They are magnetically ordered, but neighboring magnetic moments point in opposite directions which results in zero net magneti- zation. This means antiferromagnets produce no stray fields and are insensitive to external magnetic field perturbations. Furthermore, they show intrinsic high frequency dynamics, exhibit considerable spin-orbit and magneto-transport effects. Over the past decade, it has been realized that antiferromagnets have more to offer than just being utilized as passive components in exchange bias applications. This development resulted in a paradigm shift, which opens the pathway to novel concepts using antiferromagnetsmore » for spin-based technologies and applications. This article gives a broad per- spective on antiferromagnetic spintronics. In particular, the manipulation and detection of anitferromagnetic states by spintronics effects, as well as spin transport and dynamics in antiferromagnetic materials will be discussed. We will also outline current challenges and future research directions in this emerging field.« less
Cluster-Glass Phase in Pyrochlore X Y Antiferromagnets with Quenched Disorder
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Andrade, Eric C.; Hoyos, José A.; Rachel, Stephan; Vojta, Matthias
2018-03-01
We study the impact of quenched disorder (random exchange couplings or site dilution) on easy-plane pyrochlore antiferromagnets. In the clean system, order by disorder selects a magnetically ordered state from a classically degenerate manifold. In the presence of randomness, however, different orders can be chosen locally depending on details of the disorder configuration. Using a combination of analytical considerations and classical Monte Carlo simulations, we argue that any long-range-ordered magnetic state is destroyed beyond a critical level of randomness where the system breaks into magnetic domains due to random exchange anisotropies, becoming, therefore, a glass of spin clusters, in accordance with the available experimental data. These random anisotropies originate from off-diagonal exchange couplings in the microscopic Hamiltonian, establishing their relevance to other magnets with strong spin-orbit coupling.
Ising antiferromagnet on the Archimedean lattices.
Yu, Unjong
2015-06-01
Geometric frustration effects were studied systematically with the Ising antiferromagnet on the 11 Archimedean lattices using the Monte Carlo methods. The Wang-Landau algorithm for static properties (specific heat and residual entropy) and the Metropolis algorithm for a freezing order parameter were adopted. The exact residual entropy was also found. Based on the degree of frustration and dynamic properties, ground states of them were determined. The Shastry-Sutherland lattice and the trellis lattice are weakly frustrated and have two- and one-dimensional long-range-ordered ground states, respectively. The bounce, maple-leaf, and star lattices have the spin ice phase. The spin liquid phase appears in the triangular and kagome lattices.
Ising antiferromagnet on the Archimedean lattices
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yu, Unjong
2015-06-01
Geometric frustration effects were studied systematically with the Ising antiferromagnet on the 11 Archimedean lattices using the Monte Carlo methods. The Wang-Landau algorithm for static properties (specific heat and residual entropy) and the Metropolis algorithm for a freezing order parameter were adopted. The exact residual entropy was also found. Based on the degree of frustration and dynamic properties, ground states of them were determined. The Shastry-Sutherland lattice and the trellis lattice are weakly frustrated and have two- and one-dimensional long-range-ordered ground states, respectively. The bounce, maple-leaf, and star lattices have the spin ice phase. The spin liquid phase appears in the triangular and kagome lattices.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
MacDougall, Gregory J.; Aczel, Adam A.; Su, Yixi
The A-site spinel material CoAl 2O 4 is a physical realization of the frustrated diamond-lattice antiferromagnet, a model in which unique incommensurate or “spin-spiral-liquid” ground states are predicted. Our previous single-crystal neutron scattering study instead classified it as a “kinetically inhibited” antiferromagnet, where the long-ranged correlations of a collinear Néel ground state are blocked by the freezing of domain-wall motion below a first-order phase transition at T*=6.5 K. This study provides new data sets from a number of experiments, which support and expand this work in several important ways. We show that the phenomenology leading to the kinetically inhibited ordermore » is unaffected by sample measured and instrument resolution, while new low-temperature measurements reveal spin correlations are unchanging between T=2 K and 250 mK, consistent with a frozen state. Polarized diffuse neutron measurements show several interesting magnetic features, which can be entirely explained by the existence of short-ranged Néel order. Finally, and crucially, this paper presents some neutron scattering studies of single crystalline MnAl 2O 4, which acts as an unfrustrated analog to CoAl 2O 4 and shows all the hallmarks of a classical antiferromagnet with a continuous phase transition to Néel order at T N=39 K. Direct comparison between the two compounds indicates that CoAl 2O 4 is unique, not in the nature of high-temperature diffuse correlations, but rather in the nature of the frozen state below T*. Finally, the higher level of cation inversion in the MnAl 2O 4 sample indicates that this behavior is primarily an effect of greater next-nearest-neighbor exchange.« less
MacDougall, Gregory J.; Aczel, Adam A.; Su, Yixi; ...
2016-11-17
The A-site spinel material CoAl 2O 4 is a physical realization of the frustrated diamond-lattice antiferromagnet, a model in which unique incommensurate or “spin-spiral-liquid” ground states are predicted. Our previous single-crystal neutron scattering study instead classified it as a “kinetically inhibited” antiferromagnet, where the long-ranged correlations of a collinear Néel ground state are blocked by the freezing of domain-wall motion below a first-order phase transition at T*=6.5 K. This study provides new data sets from a number of experiments, which support and expand this work in several important ways. We show that the phenomenology leading to the kinetically inhibited ordermore » is unaffected by sample measured and instrument resolution, while new low-temperature measurements reveal spin correlations are unchanging between T=2 K and 250 mK, consistent with a frozen state. Polarized diffuse neutron measurements show several interesting magnetic features, which can be entirely explained by the existence of short-ranged Néel order. Finally, and crucially, this paper presents some neutron scattering studies of single crystalline MnAl 2O 4, which acts as an unfrustrated analog to CoAl 2O 4 and shows all the hallmarks of a classical antiferromagnet with a continuous phase transition to Néel order at T N=39 K. Direct comparison between the two compounds indicates that CoAl 2O 4 is unique, not in the nature of high-temperature diffuse correlations, but rather in the nature of the frozen state below T*. Finally, the higher level of cation inversion in the MnAl 2O 4 sample indicates that this behavior is primarily an effect of greater next-nearest-neighbor exchange.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sarwar, T.; Qamar, A.; Nadeem, M.
2017-07-01
Dynamics of spin ordering in the manganite Nd0.5Ca0.5MnO3 have been investigated in this paper. It was observed that the complex mixed magnetic ordering in pellets is comprised of antiferromagnetic ordering at 160 K (TN) and complete charge ordering at 250 K (TCO). Under ac field, appearance of unstable ferromagnetic correlations is observed above TCO, which is badly frustrated due to strong spin disorder induced by Jahn Teller distortions. Impedance measurements reveal the spin glass like scenario, suppressing the strong antiferromagnetic and charge ordering states below TN.
Canted antiferromagnetism in phase-pure CuMnSb
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Regnat, A.; Bauer, A.; Senyshyn, A.; Meven, M.; Hradil, K.; Jorba, P.; Nemkovski, K.; Pedersen, B.; Georgii, R.; Gottlieb-Schönmeyer, S.; Pfleiderer, C.
2018-05-01
We report the low-temperature properties of phase-pure single crystals of the half-Heusler compound CuMnSb grown by means of optical float zoning. The magnetization, specific heat, electrical resistivity, and Hall effect of our single crystals exhibit an antiferromagnetic transition at TN=55 K and a second anomaly at a temperature T*≈34 K. Powder and single-crystal neutron diffraction establish an ordered magnetic moment of (3.9 ±0.1 ) μB/f .u . , consistent with the effective moment inferred from the Curie-Weiss dependence of the susceptibility. Below TN, the Mn sublattice displays commensurate type-II antiferromagnetic order with propagation vectors and magnetic moments along <111 > (magnetic space group R [I ]3 c ). Surprisingly, below T*, the moments tilt away from <111 > by a finite angle δ ≈11∘ , forming a canted antiferromagnetic structure without uniform magnetization consistent with magnetic space group C [B ]c . Our results establish that type-II antiferromagnetism is not the zero-temperature magnetic ground state of CuMnSb as may be expected of the face-centered cubic Mn sublattice.
Fe-induced enhancement of antiferromagnetic spin correlations in Mn2-xFexBO4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kazak, N. V.; Platunov, M. S.; Knyazev, Yu. V.; Moshkina, E. M.; Gavrilkin, S. Yu.; Bayukov, O. A.; Gorev, M. V.; Pogoreltsev, E. I.; Zeer, G. M.; Zharkov, S. M.; Ovchinnikov, S. G.
2018-04-01
Fe substitution effect on the magnetic behavior of Mn2-xFexBO4 (x = 0.3, 0.5, 0.7) warwickites has been investigated combining Mössbauer spectroscopy, dc magnetization, ac magnetic susceptibility, and heat capacity measurements. The Fe3+ ions distribution over two crystallographic nonequivalent sites is studied. The Fe introduction breaks a long-range antiferromagnetic order and leads to onset of spin-glass ground state. The antiferromagnetic short-range-order spin correlations persist up to temperatures well above TSG reflecting in increasing deviations from the Curie-Weiss law, the reduced effective magnetic moment and "missing" entropy. The results are interpreted in the terms of the progressive increase of the frustration effect and the formation of spin-correlated regions.
Influence of electron doping on the ground state of (Sr 1-xLa x) 2IrO 4
Chen, Xiang; Hogan, Tom; Walkup, D.; ...
2015-08-17
The evolution of the electronic properties of electron-doped (Sr 1-xLa x) 2IrO 4 is experimentally explored as the doping limit of La is approached. As electrons are introduced, the electronic ground state transitions from a spin-orbit Mott phase into an electronically phase separated state, where long-range magnetic order vanishes beyond x = 0:02 and charge transport remains percolative up to the limit of La substitution (x =0:06). In particular, the electronic ground state remains inhomogeneous even beyond the collapse of the parent state's long-range antiferromagnetic order, while persistent short-range magnetism survives up to the highest La-substitution levels. Furthermore, as electronsmore » are doped into Sr 2IrO 4, we observe the appearance of a low temperature magnetic glass-like state intermediate to the complete suppression of antiferromagnetic order. Universalities and di erences in the electron-doped phase diagrams of single layer and bilayer Ruddlesden-Popper strontium iridates are discussed.« less
Robust spin correlations at high magnetic fields in the harmonic honeycomb iridates
Modic, K. A.; Ramshaw, Brad J.; Betts, J. B.; ...
2017-08-01
Here, the complex antiferromagnetic orders observed in the honeycomb iridates are a double-edged sword in the search for a quantum spin-liquid: both attesting that the magnetic interactions provide many of the necessary ingredients, while simultaneously impeding access. Focus has naturally been drawn to the unusual magnetic orders that hint at the underlying spin correlations. However, the study of any particular broken symmetry state generally provides little clue about the possibility of other nearby ground states. Here we use magnetic fields approaching 100 Tesla to reveal the extent of the spin correlations in γ-lithium iridate. We find that a small componentmore » of field along the magnetic easy-axis melts long-range order, revealing a bistable, strongly correlated spin state. Far from the usual destruction of antiferromagnetism via spin polarization, the high-field state possesses only a small fraction of the total iridium moment, without evidence for long-range order up to the highest attainable magnetic fields.« less
Signature of Griffith phase in (Tb1-xCex)MnO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kumar, Abhishek; Dwivedi, G. D.; Singh, A.; Singh, R.; Shukla, K. K.; Yang, H. D.; Ghosh, A. K.; Chatterjee, Sandip
2016-05-01
Griffith phase phenomena is attributed to existence of FM (ferromagnetic) cluster in AFM (antiferromagnetic) ordering which usually occurs in ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic bilayers or multilayers. In (Tb1-xCex)MnO3 evolution of Griffith phase have been observed. The observed Griffith phase might be due to the exchange interaction between Mn3+/Mn2+ states.
Hidden order signatures in the antiferromagnetic phase of U ( Ru 1 - x Fe x ) 2 Si 2
Williams, Travis J.; Aczel, Adam A.; Stone, Matthew B.; ...
2017-03-31
We present a comprehensive set of elastic and inelastic neutron scattering measurements on a range of Fe-doped samples of U(Ru 1–xFe x) 2Si 2 with 0.01 ≤ x ≤ 0.15. All of the samples measured exhibit long-range antiferromagnetic order, with the size of the magnetic moment quickly increasing to 0.51μB at 2.5% doping and continuing to increase monotonically with doping, reaching 0.69μB at 15% doping. Time-of-flight and inelastic triple-axis measurements show the existence of excitations at (1 0 0) and (1.4 0 0) in all samples, which are also observed in the parent compound. While the excitations in the 1%more » doping are quantitatively identical to the parent material, the gap and width of the excitations change rapidly at 2.5% Fe doping and above. The 1% doped sample shows evidence for a separation in temperature between the hidden order and antiferromagnetic transitions, suggesting that the antiferromagnetic state emerges at very low Fe dopings. Finally, the combined neutron scattering data suggest not only discontinuous changes in the magnetic moment and excitations between the hidden order and antiferromagnetic phases, but that these changes continue to evolve up to at least x = 0.15.« less
Sergeicheva, E. G.; Sosin, S. S.; Prozorova, L. A.; ...
2017-01-18
We report on an electron spin resonance (ESR) study of a nearly one-dimensional (1D) spin-1/2 chain antiferromagnet, Sr 2CuO 3, with extremely weak magnetic ordering. The ESR spectra at T > T N, in the disordered Luttinger-spin-liquid phase, reveal nearly ideal Heisenberg-chain behavior with only a very small, field-independent linewidth, ~1/T. In the ordered state, below T N, we identify field-dependent antiferromagnetic resonance modes, which are well described by pseudo-Goldstone magnons in the model of a collinear biaxial antiferromagnet. Additionally, we observe a major resonant mode with unusual and strongly anisotropic properties, which is not anticipated by the conventional theorymore » of Goldstone spin waves. Lastly, we propose that this unexpected magnetic excitation can be attributed to a field-independent magnon mode renormalized due to its interaction with the high-energy amplitude (Higgs) mode in the regime of weak spontaneous symmetry breaking.« less
Ground-state phases of the spin-1 J1-J2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the honeycomb lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, P. H. Y.; Bishop, R. F.
2016-06-01
We study the zero-temperature quantum phase diagram of a spin-1 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the honeycomb lattice with both nearest-neighbor exchange coupling J1>0 and frustrating next-nearest-neighbor coupling J2≡κ J1>0 , using the coupled cluster method implemented to high orders of approximation, and based on model states with different forms of classical magnetic order. For each we calculate directly in the bulk thermodynamic limit both ground-state low-energy parameters (including the energy per spin, magnetic order parameter, spin stiffness coefficient, and zero-field uniform transverse magnetic susceptibility) and their generalized susceptibilities to various forms of valence-bond crystalline (VBC) order, as well as the energy gap to the lowest-lying spin-triplet excitation. In the range 0 <κ <1 we find evidence for four distinct phases. Two of these are quasiclassical phases with antiferromagnetic long-range order, one with two-sublattice Néel order for κ <κc1=0.250(5 ) , and another with four-sublattice Néel-II order for κ >κc 2=0.340 (5 ) . Two different paramagnetic phases are found to exist in the intermediate region. Over the range κc1<κ<κci=0.305 (5 ) we find a gapless phase with no discernible magnetic order, which is a strong candidate for being a quantum spin liquid, while over the range κci<κ <κc 2 we find a gapped phase, which is most likely a lattice nematic with staggered dimer VBC order that breaks the lattice rotational symmetry.
Electronic Structures of Anti-Ferromagnetic Tetraradicals: Ab Initio and Semi-Empirical Studies.
Zhang, Dawei; Liu, Chungen
2016-04-12
The energy relationships and electronic structures of the lowest-lying spin states in several anti-ferromagnetic tetraradical model systems are studied with high-level ab initio and semi-empirical methods. The Full-CI method (FCI), the complete active space second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2), and the n-electron valence state perturbation theory (NEVPT2) are employed to obtain reference results. By comparing the energy relationships predicted from the Heisenberg and Hubbard models with ab initio benchmarks, the accuracy of the widely used Heisenberg model for anti-ferromagnetic spin-coupling in low-spin polyradicals is cautiously tested in this work. It is found that the strength of electron correlation (|U/t|) concerning anti-ferromagnetically coupled radical centers could range widely from strong to moderate correlation regimes and could become another degree of freedom besides the spin multiplicity. Accordingly, the Heisenberg-type model works well in the regime of strong correlation, which reproduces well the energy relationships along with the wave functions of all the spin states. In moderately spin-correlated tetraradicals, the results of the prototype Heisenberg model deviate severely from those of multi-reference electron correlation ab initio methods, while the extended Heisenberg model, containing four-body terms, can introduce reasonable corrections and maintains its accuracy in this condition. In the weak correlation regime, both the prototype Heisenberg model and its extended forms containing higher-order correction terms will encounter difficulties. Meanwhile, the Hubbard model shows balanced accuracy from strong to weak correlation cases and can reproduce qualitatively correct electronic structures, which makes it more suitable for the study of anti-ferromagnetic coupling in polyradical systems.
Local spin-density-wave order inside vortex cores in multiband superconductors
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Mishra, Vivek; Koshelev, Alexei E.
Coexistence of antiferromagnetic order with superconductivity in many families of newly discovered iron-based superconductors has renewed interest to this old problem. Due to competition between the two types of order, one can expect appearance of the antiferromagnetism inside the cores of the vortices generated by the external magnetic field. The structure of a vortex in type II superconductors holds significant importance from the theoretical and the application points of view. In this paper, we consider the internal vortex structure in a two-band s± superconductor near a spin-density-wave instability. We treat the problem in a completely self-consistent manner within the quasiclassicalmore » Eilenberger formalism. We study the structure of the s± superconducting order and magnetic field-induced spin-density-wave order near an isolated vortex. Finally, we examine the effect of this spin-density-wave state inside the vortex cores on the local density of states.« less
Local spin-density-wave order inside vortex cores in multiband superconductors
Mishra, Vivek; Koshelev, Alexei E.
2015-08-13
Coexistence of antiferromagnetic order with superconductivity in many families of newly discovered iron-based superconductors has renewed interest to this old problem. Due to competition between the two types of order, one can expect appearance of the antiferromagnetism inside the cores of the vortices generated by the external magnetic field. The structure of a vortex in type II superconductors holds significant importance from the theoretical and the application points of view. In this paper, we consider the internal vortex structure in a two-band s± superconductor near a spin-density-wave instability. We treat the problem in a completely self-consistent manner within the quasiclassicalmore » Eilenberger formalism. We study the structure of the s± superconducting order and magnetic field-induced spin-density-wave order near an isolated vortex. Finally, we examine the effect of this spin-density-wave state inside the vortex cores on the local density of states.« less
Relief of frustration in the Heisenberg pyrochlore antiferromagnet Gd2Pt2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hallas, A. M.; Sharma, A. Z.; Cai, Y.; Munsie, T. J.; Wilson, M. N.; Tachibana, M.; Wiebe, C. R.; Luke, G. M.
2016-10-01
The gadolinium pyrochlores Gd2B2O7 are among the best realizations of antiferromagnetically coupled Heisenberg spins on a pyrochlore lattice. We present a magnetic characterization of Gd2Pt2O7 , a unique member of this family. Magnetic susceptibility, heat capacity, and muon spin relaxation measurements show that Gd2Pt2O7 undergoes an antiferromagnetic ordering transition at TN=1.6 K. This transition is strongly first order, as indicated by the sharpness of the heat capacity anomaly, thermal hysteresis in the magnetic susceptibility, and a nondivergent relaxation rate in μ SR . The form of the heat capacity below TN suggests that the ground state is an anisotropic collinear antiferromagnet with an excitation spectrum that is gapped by 0.245(1) meV. The ordering temperature in Gd2Pt2O7,TN=1.6 K, is a substantial 160% increase from other gadolinium pyrochlores, which are all known to order at 1 K or lower. We attribute this enhancement in TN to the B -site cation, platinum. Despite being nonmagnetic, platinum has a filled 5 d t2 g orbital and an empty 5 d eg orbital that can facilitate superexchange. Thus, the magnetic frustration in Gd2Pt2O7 is partially "relieved," thereby promoting magnetic order.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tokumoto, T.; Brooks, J. S.; Oshima, Y.; Choi, E. S.; Brunel, L. C.; Akutsu, H.; Kaihatsu, T.; Yamada, J.; van Tol, J.
2008-04-01
Electron spin resonance reveals the spin behavior of conduction (π) and localized (d) electrons in β-(BDA-TTP)2MCl4 (M=Fe, Ga). Both the Ga3+(S=0) and Fe3+(S=5/2) compounds exhibit a metal-insulator transition at 113 K with the simultaneous formation of a spin-singlet ground state in the π electron system of the donor molecules. The behavior is consistent with charge ordering in β-(BDA-TTP)2MCl4 at the metal-insulator transition. At 5 K, the Fe3+ compound orders antiferromagnetically, even though the π electrons, which normally would facilitate magnetic exchange, are localized nonmagnetic singlets.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dugave, Maxime; Göhmann, Frank; Kozlowski, Karol K.; Suzuki, Junji
2016-09-01
We use the form factors of the quantum transfer matrix in the zero-temperature limit in order to study the two-point ground-state correlation functions of the XXZ chain in the antiferromagnetic massive regime. We obtain novel form factor series representations of the correlation functions which differ from those derived either from the q-vertex-operator approach or from the algebraic Bethe Ansatz approach to the usual transfer matrix. We advocate that our novel representations are numerically more efficient and allow for a straightforward calculation of the large-distance asymptotic behaviour of the two-point functions. Keeping control over the temperature corrections to the two-point functions we see that these are of order {T}∞ in the whole antiferromagnetic massive regime. The isotropic limit of our result yields a novel form factor series representation for the two-point correlation functions of the XXX chain at zero magnetic field. Dedicated to the memory of Petr Petrovich Kulish.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Craco, L.
2017-10-01
Using density functional dynamical mean-field theory (DFDMFT) we address the problem of antiferromagnetic spin ordering in isotropically superstrained graphene. It is shown that the interplay between strain-induced one-particle band narrowing and sizable on-site electron-electron interactions naturally stabilizes a magnetic phase with orbital-selective spin-polarized p -band electronic states. While an antiferromagnetic phase with strong local moments arises in the pz orbitals, the px ,y bands reveal a metallic state with quenched sublattice magnetization. We next investigate the possibility of superconductivity to emerge in this selective magnetoelectronic state. Our theory is expected to be an important step to understanding the next generation of flexible electronics made of Mott localized carbon-based materials as well as the ability of superstrained graphene to host coexisting superconductivity and magnetism at low temperatures.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liu, R. M.; Zhuo, W. Z.; Chen, J.; Qin, M. H.; Zeng, M.; Lu, X. B.; Gao, X. S.; Liu, J.-M.
2017-07-01
We study the thermal phase transition of the fourfold degenerate phases (the plaquette and single-stripe states) in the two-dimensional frustrated Ising model on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice using Monte Carlo simulations. The critical Ashkin-Teller-like behavior is identified both in the plaquette phase region and the single-stripe phase region. The four-state Potts critical end points differentiating the continuous transitions from the first-order ones are estimated based on finite-size-scaling analyses. Furthermore, a similar behavior of the transition to the fourfold single-stripe phase is also observed in the anisotropic triangular Ising model. Thus, this work clearly demonstrates that the transitions to the fourfold degenerate states of two-dimensional Ising antiferromagnets exhibit similar transition behavior.
Gapless Spin-Liquid Ground State in the S =1 /2 Kagome Antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liao, H. J.; Xie, Z. Y.; Chen, J.; Liu, Z. Y.; Xie, H. D.; Huang, R. Z.; Normand, B.; Xiang, T.
2017-03-01
The defining problem in frustrated quantum magnetism, the ground state of the nearest-neighbor S =1 /2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the kagome lattice, has defied all theoretical and numerical methods employed to date. We apply the formalism of tensor-network states, specifically the method of projected entangled simplex states, which combines infinite system size with a correct accounting for multipartite entanglement. By studying the ground-state energy, the finite magnetic order appearing at finite tensor bond dimensions, and the effects of a next-nearest-neighbor coupling, we demonstrate that the ground state is a gapless spin liquid. We discuss the comparison with other numerical studies and the physical interpretation of this result.
Spin waves and magnetic exchange interactions in insulating Rb(0.89)Fe(1.58)Se(2).
Wang, Miaoyin; Fang, Chen; Yao, Dao-Xin; Tan, GuoTai; Harriger, Leland W; Song, Yu; Netherton, Tucker; Zhang, Chenglin; Wang, Meng; Stone, Matthew B; Tian, Wei; Hu, Jiangping; Dai, Pengcheng
2011-12-06
The parent compounds of iron pnictide superconductors are bad metals with a collinear antiferromagnetic structure and Néel temperatures below 220 K. Although alkaline iron selenide A(y)Fe(1.6+x)Se(2) (A=K, Rb, Cs) superconductors are isostructural with iron pnictides, in the vicinity of the undoped limit they are insulators, forming a block antiferromagnetic order and having Néel temperatures of roughly 500 K. Here we show that the spin waves of the insulating antiferromagnet Rb(0.89)Fe(1.58)Se(2) can be accurately described by a local moment Heisenberg Hamiltonian. A fitting analysis of the spin wave spectra reveals that the next-nearest neighbour couplings in Rb(0.89)Fe(1.58)Se(2), (Ba,Ca,Sr)Fe(2)As(2), and Fe(1.05)Te are of similar magnitude. Our results suggest a common origin for the magnetism of all the Fe-based superconductors, despite having different ground states and antiferromagnetic orderings.
Magnetoresistive detection of strongly pinned uncompensated magnetization in antiferromagnetic FeMn
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lapa, Pavel N.; Roshchin, Igor V.; Ding, Junjia
2017-01-17
Here we observed and studied pinned uncompensated magnetization in an antiferromagnet using magnetoresistance measurements. For this, we developed antiferromagnet-ferromagnet spin valves (AFSVs) that consist of an antiferromagnetic layer and a ferromagnetic one, separated by a nonmagnetic conducting spacer. In an AFSV, the uncompensated magnetization in the antiferromagnet affects scattering of spin-polarized electrons giving rise to giant magnetoresitance (GMR). By measuring angular dependence of AFSVs' resistance, we detected pinned uncompensated magnetization responsible for the exchange bias effect in an antiferromagnet- only exchange bias system Cu/FeMn/Cu. The fact that GMR measured in this system persists up to 110 kOe indicates that themore » scattering occurs on strongly pinned uncompensated magnetic moments in FeMn. This strong pinning can be explained if this pinned uncompensated magnetization is a thermodynamically stable state and coupled to the antiferromagnetic order parameter. Finally, using the AFSV technique, we confirmed that the two interfaces between FeMn and Cu are magnetically different: The uncompensated magnetization is pinned only at the interface with the bottom Cu layer.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bera, A. K.; Yusuf, S. M.; Kumar, Amit; Ritter, C.
2017-03-01
The crystal structure, magnetic ground state, and the temperature-dependent microscopic spin-spin correlations of the frustrated honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet N a2C o2Te O6 have been investigated by powder neutron diffraction. A long-range antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering has been found below TN˜24.8 K . The magnetic ground state, determined to be zigzag antiferromagnetic and characterized by a propagation vector k =(1 /2 0 0 ) , occurs due to the competing exchange interactions up to third-nearest neighbors within the honeycomb lattice. The exceptional existence of a limited magnetic correlation length along the c axis (perpendicular to the honeycomb layers in the a b planes) has been found even at 1.8 K, well below the TN˜24.8 K . The observed limited correlation along the c axis is explained by the disorder distribution of the Na ions within the intermediate layers between honeycomb planes. The reduced ordered moments mCo (1 )=2.77 (3 ) μB/C o2 + and mCo (2 )=2.45 (2 ) μB/C o2 + at 1.8 K reflect the persistence of spin fluctuations in the ordered state. Above TN˜24.8 K , the presence of short-range magnetic correlations, manifested by broad diffuse magnetic peaks in the diffraction patterns, has been found. Reverse Monte Carlo analysis of the experimental diffuse magnetic scattering data reveals that the spin correlations are mainly confined within the two-dimensional honeycomb layers (a b plane) with a correlation length of ˜12 Å at 25 K. The nature of the spin arrangements is found to be similar in both the short-range and long-range ordered magnetic states. This implies that the short-range correlation grows with decreasing temperature and leads to the zigzag AFM ordering at T ≤TN . The present study provides a comprehensive picture of the magnetic correlations over the temperature range above and below the TN and their relation to the crystal structure. The role of intermediate soft Na layers on the magnetic coupling between honeycomb planes is discussed.
Half-magnetization plateau in a Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a triangular lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ye, Mengxing; Chubukov, Andrey V.
2017-10-01
We present the phase diagram of a 2D isotropic triangular Heisenberg antiferromagnet in a magnetic field. We consider spin-S model with nearest-neighbor (J1) and next-nearest-neighbor (J2) interactions. We focus on the range of 1 /8
Volume-wise destruction of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state through quantum tuning.
Frandsen, Benjamin A; Liu, Lian; Cheung, Sky C; Guguchia, Zurab; Khasanov, Rustem; Morenzoni, Elvezio; Munsie, Timothy J S; Hallas, Alannah M; Wilson, Murray N; Cai, Yipeng; Luke, Graeme M; Chen, Bijuan; Li, Wenmin; Jin, Changqing; Ding, Cui; Guo, Shengli; Ning, Fanlong; Ito, Takashi U; Higemoto, Wataru; Billinge, Simon J L; Sakamoto, Shoya; Fujimori, Atsushi; Murakami, Taito; Kageyama, Hiroshi; Alonso, Jose Antonio; Kotliar, Gabriel; Imada, Masatoshi; Uemura, Yasutomo J
2016-08-17
RENiO3 (RE=rare-earth element) and V2O3 are archetypal Mott insulator systems. When tuned by chemical substitution (RENiO3) or pressure (V2O3), they exhibit a quantum phase transition (QPT) between an antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state and a paramagnetic metallic state. Because novel physics often appears near a Mott QPT, the details of this transition, such as whether it is first or second order, are important. Here, we demonstrate through muon spin relaxation/rotation (μSR) experiments that the QPT in RENiO3 and V2O3 is first order: the magnetically ordered volume fraction decreases to zero at the QPT, resulting in a broad region of intrinsic phase separation, while the ordered magnetic moment retains its full value until it is suddenly destroyed at the QPT. These findings bring to light a surprising universality of the pressure-driven Mott transition, revealing the importance of phase separation and calling for further investigation into the nature of quantum fluctuations underlying the transition.
Volume-wise destruction of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state through quantum tuning
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Frandsen, Benjamin A.; Liu, Lian; Cheung, Sky C.; Guguchia, Zurab; Khasanov, Rustem; Morenzoni, Elvezio; Munsie, Timothy J. S.; Hallas, Alannah M.; Wilson, Murray N.; Cai, Yipeng; Luke, Graeme M.; Chen, Bijuan; Li, Wenmin; Jin, Changqing; Ding, Cui; Guo, Shengli; Ning, Fanlong; Ito, Takashi U.; Higemoto, Wataru; Billinge, Simon J. L.; Sakamoto, Shoya; Fujimori, Atsushi; Murakami, Taito; Kageyama, Hiroshi; Alonso, Jose Antonio; Kotliar, Gabriel; Imada, Masatoshi; Uemura, Yasutomo J.
2016-08-01
RENiO3 (RE=rare-earth element) and V2O3 are archetypal Mott insulator systems. When tuned by chemical substitution (RENiO3) or pressure (V2O3), they exhibit a quantum phase transition (QPT) between an antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state and a paramagnetic metallic state. Because novel physics often appears near a Mott QPT, the details of this transition, such as whether it is first or second order, are important. Here, we demonstrate through muon spin relaxation/rotation (μSR) experiments that the QPT in RENiO3 and V2O3 is first order: the magnetically ordered volume fraction decreases to zero at the QPT, resulting in a broad region of intrinsic phase separation, while the ordered magnetic moment retains its full value until it is suddenly destroyed at the QPT. These findings bring to light a surprising universality of the pressure-driven Mott transition, revealing the importance of phase separation and calling for further investigation into the nature of quantum fluctuations underlying the transition.
Diamond lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oitmaa, J.
2018-04-01
We investigate ground-state and high-temperature properties of the nearest-neighbour Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the three-dimensional diamond lattice, using series expansion methods. The ground-state energy and magnetization, as well as the magnon spectrum, are calculated and found to be in good agreement with first-order spin-wave theory, with a quantum renormalization factor of about 1.13. High-temperature series are derived for the free energy, and physical and staggered susceptibilities for spin S = 1/2, 1 and 3/2, and analysed to obtain the corresponding Curie and Néel temperatures.
Magnetic Ordering under Strain and Spin-Peierls Dimerization in GeCuO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Filippetti, Alessio; Fiorentini, Vincenzo
2007-05-01
Studying from first principles the competition between ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AF) interactions in the charge-transfer-insulator GeCuO3, we predict that a small external pressure should switch the uniform AF ground state to FM, and estimate (using exchange parameters computed as a function of strain) the competing AF couplings and the transition temperature to the dimerized spin-Peierls state. Although idealized as a one-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet, GeCuO3 is found to be influenced by nonideal geometry and side groups.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, F.; Dong, B. J.; Zhang, Y. Q.; Liu, W.; Zhang, H. R.; Bai, Y.; Li, S. K.; Yang, T.; Sun, J. R.; Wang, Z. J.; Zhang, Z. D.
2017-09-01
The detailed crystal structure and antiferromagnetic properties of a 42 nm thick CaMnO3 film grown on a LaAlO3 substrate with a 9 nm La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 buffer layer have been investigated. Compared with a CaMnO3 film directly grown on a LaAlO3 substrate, only one kind of orthorhombic b axis orientation along the [100] axis of the substrate is observed in the CaMnO3 film with a La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 buffer layer. To determine the antiferromagnetic ordering type of our CaMnO3 film with a buffer layer, the first-principles calculations were carried out with the results, indicating that the CaMnO3 film, even under a tensile strain of 1.9%, is still a compensated G-type antiferromagnetic order, the same as the bulk. Moreover, the exchange bias effect is observed at the interface of the CaMnO3/La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 film, further confirming the antiferromagnetic ordering of the CaMnO3 film with a buffer layer. In addition, it is concluded that the exchange bias effect originates from the spin glass state at the La0.67Ca0.33MnO3/CaMnO3 interface, which arises from a competition between the double-exchange ferromagnetic La0.67Ca0.33MnO3 and super-exchange antiferromagnetic CaMnO3 below the spin glass freezing temperature.
Magnetic correlations in the intermetallic antiferromagnet Nd3Co4Sn13
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, C. W.; Lin, J. W.; Lue, C. S.; Liu, H. F.; Kuo, C. N.; Mole, R. A.; Gardner, J. S.
2017-11-01
Specific heat, magnetic susceptibility, and neutron scattering have been used to investigate the nature of the spin system in the antiferromagnet Nd3Co4Sn13. At room temperature Nd3Co4Sn13 has a cubic, Pm-3n structure similar to Yb3Rh4Sn13. Antiferromagnetic interactions between, Nd3+ ions dominate the magnetic character of this sample and at 2.4 K the Nd spins enter a long range order state with a magnetic propagation vector q = (0 0 0) with an ordered moment of 1.78(2) µ B at 1.5 K. The magnetic Bragg intensity grows very slowly below 1 K, reaching ~2.4 µ B at 350 mK. The average magnetic Nd3+ configuration corresponds to the 3D irreducible representation Γ7. This magnetic structure can be viewed as three sublattices of antiferromagnetic spin chains coupled with each other in the 120°-configuration. A well-defined magnetic excitation was measured around the 1 1 1 zone centre and the resulting dispersion curve is appropriate for an antiferromagnet with a gap of 0.20(1) meV.
Charge ordering in Ni 1 + / Ni 2 + nickelates: La 4 Ni 3 O 8 and La 3 Ni 2 O 6
Botana, Antia S.; Pardo, Victor; Pickett, Warren E.; ...
2016-08-09
Ab initio calculations allow us to establish a close connection between the Ruddlesden-Popper layered nickelates and cuprates not only in terms of filling of d levels (close to d 9) but also because they show Ni 1+(S = 1/2)/Ni 2+(S = 0) stripe ordering. We obtained the insulating charge-ordered ground state from a combination of structural distortions and magnetic order. The Ni 2+ ions are in a low-spin configuration (S = 0) yielding an antiferromagnetic arrangement of Ni 1+ S = 1/2 ions like the long-sought spin-1/2 antiferromagnetic insulator analog of the cuprate parent materials. Furthermore, the analogy extends further with the main contribution to the bands near the Fermi energy coming from hybridized Ni d more » $$_x$$ 2- $$_y$$ 2 and O $p$ states.« less
Incoherent vs. coherent behavior in the normal state of copper oxide superconductors
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Tesanovic, Zlatko
1991-01-01
The self-consistent quantum fluctuations around the mean-field Hartree-Fock state of the Hubbard model provide a very good description of the ground state and low temperature properties of a 2-D itinerant antiferromagnet. Very good agreement with numerical calculations and experimental data is obtained by including the one- and two-loop spin wave corrections to various physical quantities. In particular, the destruction of the long-range order above the Neel temperature can be understood as a spontaneous generation of a length-scale epsilon(T), which should be identified as the spin correlation length. For finite doping, the question of the Hartree-Fock starting point becomes a more complex one since an extra hole tends to self-trap in antiferromagnetic background. Such quantum defects in an underlying antiferromagnetic state can be spin-bags or vortex-like structures and tend to suppress the long-range order. If motion of the holes occurs on a time-scale shorter than the one associated with the motion of these quantum defects of a spin background, one obtains several important empirical features of the normal state of CuO superconductors like linear T-dependence of resistivity, the cusp in the tunneling density of states, etc. As opposed to a familiar Fermi-liquid behavior, the phenomenology of the above system is dominated by a large incoherent piece of a single hole propagator, resulting in many unusual normal state properties.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Susa, Yuki; Jadebeck, Johann F.; Nishimori, Hidetoshi
2017-04-01
We study the relation between quantum fluctuations and the significant enhancement of the performance of quantum annealing in a mean-field Hamiltonian. First-order quantum phase transitions were shown to be reduced to second order by antiferromagnetic transverse interactions in a mean-field-type many-body-interacting Ising spin system in a transverse field, which means an exponential speedup of quantum annealing by adiabatic quantum computation. We investigate if and how quantum effects manifest themselves around these first- and second-order phase transitions to understand if the antiferromagnetic transverse interactions appended to the conventional transverse-field Ising model induce notable quantum effects. By measuring the proximity of the semiclassical spin-coherent state to the true ground state as well as the magnitude of the concurrence representing entanglement, we conclude that significant quantum fluctuations exist around second-order transitions, whereas quantum effects are much less prominent at first-order transitions. Although the location of the transition point can be predicted by the classical picture, system properties near the transition need quantum-mechanical descriptions for a second-order transition but not necessarily for first order. It is also found that quantum fluctuations are large within the ferromagnetic phase after a second-order transition from the paramagnetic phase. These results suggest that the antiferromagnetic transverse interactions induce marked quantum effects, and this fact would be related to closely to the significant enhancement of the performance of quantum annealing.
Strain driven anisotropic magnetoresistance in antiferromagnetic La0.4Sr0.6MnO3 thin films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ward, T. Zac; Wong, A. T.; Takamura, Yayoi; Herklotz, Andreas
2015-03-01
Antiferromagnets (AFM) are a promising alternative to ferromagnets (FM) in spintronic applications. The reason stems from the fact that at high data storage densities stray fields could destroy FM set states while AFMs would be relatively insensitive to this data corruption. This work presents the first ever example of antiferromagnetic La0.4Sr0.6MnO3 thin films stabilized in different strain states. Strain is found to drive different types of AFM ordering, and these variations in ordering type are shown to have a profound impact on both the magnitude and character of the materials' resistive response to magnetic field direction, or anisotropic magnetoresistance (AMR) behavior (one standard of spintronic suitability). The compressively strained film shows the highest recorded AMR response in an ohmic AFM device of 63%, while the tensile strained film shows a typical AFM AMR of 0.6%. These findings demonstrate the necessity of understanding electron ordering in AFM spintronic applications and provide a new benchmark for AMR response. This work was supported by the U. S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Science and Engineering Division.
Nematic quantum critical point without magnetism in FeSe1-xSx superconductors.
Hosoi, Suguru; Matsuura, Kohei; Ishida, Kousuke; Wang, Hao; Mizukami, Yuta; Watashige, Tatsuya; Kasahara, Shigeru; Matsuda, Yuji; Shibauchi, Takasada
2016-07-19
In most unconventional superconductors, the importance of antiferromagnetic fluctuations is widely acknowledged. In addition, cuprate and iron-pnictide high-temperature superconductors often exhibit unidirectional (nematic) electronic correlations, including stripe and orbital orders, whose fluctuations may also play a key role for electron pairing. In these materials, however, such nematic correlations are intertwined with antiferromagnetic or charge orders, preventing the identification of the essential role of nematic fluctuations. This calls for new materials having only nematicity without competing or coexisting orders. Here we report systematic elastoresistance measurements in FeSe1-xSx superconductors, which, unlike other iron-based families, exhibit an electronic nematic order without accompanying antiferromagnetic order. We find that the nematic transition temperature decreases with sulfur content x; whereas, the nematic fluctuations are strongly enhanced. Near [Formula: see text], the nematic susceptibility diverges toward absolute zero, revealing a nematic quantum critical point. The obtained phase diagram for the nematic and superconducting states highlights FeSe1-xSx as a unique nonmagnetic system suitable for studying the impact of nematicity on superconductivity.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, P. H. Y.; Bishop, R. F.
2018-03-01
We implement the coupled cluster method to very high orders of approximation to study the spin-1/2 J1 -J2 Heisenberg model on a cross-striped square lattice. Every nearest-neighbour pair of sites on the square lattice has an isotropic antiferromagnetic exchange bond of strength J1 > 0 , while the basic square plaquettes in alternate columns have either both or neither next-nearest-neighbour (diagonal) pairs of sites connected by an equivalent frustrating bond of strength J2 ≡ αJ1 > 0 . By studying the magnetic order parameter (i.e., the average local on-site magnetization) in the range 0 ≤ α ≤ 1 of the frustration parameter we find that the quasiclassical antiferromagnetic Néel and (so-called) double Néel states form the stable ground-state phases in the respective regions α < α1ac = 0 . 46(1) and α > α1bc = 0.615(5) . The double Néel state has Néel (⋯ ↑↓↑↓ ⋯) ordering along the (column) direction parallel to the stripes of squares with both or no J2 bonds, and spins alternating in a pairwise (⋯ ↑↑↓↓↑↑↓↓ ⋯) fashion along the perpendicular (row) direction, so that the parallel pairs occur on squares with both J2 bonds present. Further explicit calculations of both the triplet spin gap and the zero-field uniform transverse magnetic susceptibility provide compelling evidence that the ground-state phase over all or most of the intermediate regime α1ac < α < α1bc is a gapped state with no discernible long-range magnetic order.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, X.; Cai, Y. Q.; Cui, Q.; Lin, C. J.; Dun, Z. L.; Matsubayashi, K.; Uwatoko, Y.; Sato, Y.; Kawae, T.; Lv, S. J.; Jin, C. Q.; Zhou, J.-S.; Goodenough, J. B.; Zhou, H. D.; Cheng, J.-G.
2016-12-01
G d2S n2O7 and G d2T i2O7 have been regarded as good experimental realizations of the classical Heisenberg pyrochlore antiferromagnet with dipolar interaction. The former was found to adopt the Palmer-Chalker state via a single, first-order transition at TN≈1 K , while the latter enters a distinct, partially ordered state through two successive transitions at TN 1≈1 K and TN 2= 0.75 K . To shed more light on their distinct magnetic ground states, we have synthesized two more gadolinium-based pyrochlore oxides, G d2G e2O7 and G d2P t2O7 , under high-pressure conditions and performed detailed characterizations via x-ray powder diffraction, dc and ac magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat measurements down to 100 mK. We found that both compounds enter a long-range antiferromagnetically ordered state through a single, first-order transition at TN= 1.4 K for G d2G e2O7 and TN= 1.56 K for G d2P t2O7 , with the specific heat anomaly similar to that of G d2S n2O7 rather than G d2T i2O7 . Interestingly, the low-temperature magnetic specific heat values of both G d2G e2O7 and G d2P t2O7 were found to follow nicely the T3 dependence as expected for a three-dimensional antiferromagnet with gapless spin-wave excitations. We have rationalized the enhancement of TN in terms of the reduced Gd-Gd distances for the chemically pressurized G d2G e2O7 and the addition of extra superexchange pathways through the empty Pt -eg orbitals for G d2P t2O7 . Our current study has expanded the family of gadolinium-based pyrochlores and permits us to achieve a better understanding of their distinct magnetic properties in a more comprehensive perspective.
Remanent Magnetization: Signature of Many-Body Localization in Quantum Antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ros, V.; Müller, M.
2017-06-01
We study the remanent magnetization in antiferromagnetic, many-body localized quantum spin chains, initialized in a fully magnetized state. Its long time limit is an order parameter for the localization transition, which is readily accessible by standard experimental probes in magnets. We analytically calculate its value in the strong-disorder regime exploiting the explicit construction of quasilocal conserved quantities of the localized phase. We discuss analogies in cold atomic systems.
Magnetic order close to superconductivity in the iron-based layered LaO1-xFxFeAs systems
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
de La Cruz, Clarina; Huang, Q.; Lynn, J. W.; Li, Jiying; , W. Ratcliff, II; Zarestky, J. L.; Mook, H. A.; Chen, G. F.; Luo, J. L.; Wang, N. L.; Dai, Pengcheng
2008-06-01
Following the discovery of long-range antiferromagnetic order in the parent compounds of high-transition-temperature (high-Tc) copper oxides, there have been efforts to understand the role of magnetism in the superconductivity that occurs when mobile `electrons' or `holes' are doped into the antiferromagnetic parent compounds. Superconductivity in the newly discovered rare-earth iron-based oxide systems ROFeAs (R, rare-earth metal) also arises from either electron or hole doping of their non-superconducting parent compounds. The parent material LaOFeAs is metallic but shows anomalies near 150K in both resistivity and d.c. magnetic susceptibility. Although optical conductivity and theoretical calculations suggest that LaOFeAs exhibits a spin-density-wave (SDW) instability that is suppressed by doping with electrons to induce superconductivity, there has been no direct evidence of SDW order. Here we report neutron-scattering experiments that demonstrate that LaOFeAs undergoes an abrupt structural distortion below 155K, changing the symmetry from tetragonal (space group P4/nmm) to monoclinic (space group P112/n) at low temperatures, and then, at ~137K, develops long-range SDW-type antiferromagnetic order with a small moment but simple magnetic structure. Doping the system with fluorine suppresses both the magnetic order and the structural distortion in favour of superconductivity. Therefore, like high-Tc copper oxides, the superconducting regime in these iron-based materials occurs in close proximity to a long-range-ordered antiferromagnetic ground state.
Kim, M. G.; Wang, M.; Tucker, G. S.; ...
2015-12-02
We present the results of elastic and inelastic neutron scattering measurements on nonsuperconducting Ba(Fe 0.957Cu 0.043) 2As 2, a composition close to a quantum critical point between antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordered and paramagnetic phases. By comparing these results with the spin fluctuations in the low-Cu composition as well as the parent compound BaFe 2As 2 and superconducting Ba(Fe 1–xNi x) 2As 2 compounds, we demonstrate that paramagnon-like spin fluctuations are evident in the antiferromagnetically ordered state of Ba(Fe 0.957Cu 0.043) 2As 2, which is distinct from the AFM-like spin fluctuations in the superconducting compounds. Our observations suggest that Cu substitution decouplesmore » the interaction between quasiparticles and the spin fluctuations. In addition, we show that the spin-spin correlation length ξ(T) increases rapidly as the temperature is lowered and find ω/T scaling behavior, the hallmark of quantum criticality, at an antiferromagnetic quantum critical point.« less
Spinon dynamics in quantum integrable antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vlijm, R.; Caux, J.-S.
2016-05-01
The excitations of the Heisenberg antiferromagnetic spin chain in zero field are known as spinons. As pairwise-created fractionalized excitations, spinons are important in the understanding of inelastic neutron scattering experiments in (quasi-)one-dimensional materials. In the present paper, we consider the real space-time dynamics of spinons originating from a local spin flip on the antiferromagnetic ground state of the (an)isotropic Heisenberg spin-1/2 model and the Babujan-Takhtajan spin-1 model. By utilizing algebraic Bethe ansatz methods at finite system size to compute the expectation value of the local magnetization and spin-spin correlations, spinons are visualized as propagating domain walls in the antiferromagnetic spin ordering with anisotropy dependent behavior. The spin-spin correlation after the spin flip displays a light cone, satisfying the Lieb-Robinson bound for the propagation of correlations at the spinon velocity.
Volume-wise destruction of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state through quantum tuning
B. A. Frandsen; Liu, L.; Cheung, S. C.; ...
2016-08-17
RENiO 3 (RE=rare-earth element) and V 2O 3 are archetypal Mott insulator systems. When tuned by chemical substitution (RENiO 3) or pressure (V 2O 3), they exhibit a quantum phase transition (QPT) between an antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state and a paramagnetic metallic state. Because novel physics often appears near a Mott QPT, the details of this transition, such as whether it is first or second order, are important. Here, we demonstrate through muon spin relaxation/rotation (μSR) experiments that the QPT in RENiO 3 and V 2O 3 is first order: the magnetically ordered volume fraction decreases to zero at themore » QPT, resulting in a broad region of intrinsic phase separation, while the ordered magnetic moment retains its full value until it is suddenly destroyed at the QPT. These findings bring to light a surprising universality of the pressure-driven Mott transition, revealing the importance of phase separation and calling for further investigation into the nature of quantum fluctuations underlying the transition.« less
Volume-wise destruction of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state through quantum tuning
Frandsen, Benjamin A.; Liu, Lian; Cheung, Sky C.; Guguchia, Zurab; Khasanov, Rustem; Morenzoni, Elvezio; Munsie, Timothy J. S.; Hallas, Alannah M.; Wilson, Murray N.; Cai, Yipeng; Luke, Graeme M.; Chen, Bijuan; Li, Wenmin; Jin, Changqing; Ding, Cui; Guo, Shengli; Ning, Fanlong; Ito, Takashi U.; Higemoto, Wataru; Billinge, Simon J. L.; Sakamoto, Shoya; Fujimori, Atsushi; Murakami, Taito; Kageyama, Hiroshi; Alonso, Jose Antonio; Kotliar, Gabriel; Imada, Masatoshi; Uemura, Yasutomo J.
2016-01-01
RENiO3 (RE=rare-earth element) and V2O3 are archetypal Mott insulator systems. When tuned by chemical substitution (RENiO3) or pressure (V2O3), they exhibit a quantum phase transition (QPT) between an antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state and a paramagnetic metallic state. Because novel physics often appears near a Mott QPT, the details of this transition, such as whether it is first or second order, are important. Here, we demonstrate through muon spin relaxation/rotation (μSR) experiments that the QPT in RENiO3 and V2O3 is first order: the magnetically ordered volume fraction decreases to zero at the QPT, resulting in a broad region of intrinsic phase separation, while the ordered magnetic moment retains its full value until it is suddenly destroyed at the QPT. These findings bring to light a surprising universality of the pressure-driven Mott transition, revealing the importance of phase separation and calling for further investigation into the nature of quantum fluctuations underlying the transition. PMID:27531192
Chemical pressure effects on magnetism in the quantum spin liquid candidates Yb2X2O7 (X =Sn, Ti, Ge)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dun, Z. L.; Lee, M.; Choi, E. S.; Hallas, A. M.; Wiebe, C. R.; Gardner, J. S.; Arrighi, E.; Freitas, R. S.; Arevalo-Lopez, A. M.; Attfield, J. P.; Zhou, H. D.; Cheng, J. G.
2014-02-01
The linear and nonlinear ac susceptibility measurements of Yb-pyrochlores, Yb2X2O7 (X =Sn, Ti, and Ge), show transitions with a ferromagnetic nature at 0.13 and 0.25 K for Yb2Sn2O7 and Yb2Ti2O7, respectively, and an antiferromagnetic ordering at 0.62 K for Yb2Ge2O7. These systematical results (i) provided information about the nature of the unconventional magnetic ground state in Yb2Ti2O7; (ii) realized a distinct antiferromagnetic ordering state in Yb2Ge2O7; and (iii) demonstrated that the application of chemical pressure through the series of Yb-pyrochlores can efficiently perturb the fragile quantum spin fluctuations of the Yb3+ ions and lead to very different magnetic ground states.
Mott localization in a pure stripe antiferromagnet Rb 1 - δ Fe 1.5 - σ S 2
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wang, Meng; Yi, Ming; Cao, Huibo
A combination of neutron diffraction and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements on a pure antiferromagnetic stripe Rb 1-δFe 1.5-σS 2 is reported. A neutron diffraction experiment on a powder sample shows that a 98% volume fraction of the sample is in the antiferromagnetic stripe phase with rhombic iron vacancy order and a refined composition of Rb 0.66Fe 1.36S 2, and that only 2% of the sample is in the block antiferromagnetic phase with √5×√5 iron vacancy order. Furthermore, a neutron diffraction experiment on a single crystal shows that there is only a single phase with the stripe antiferromagnetic order with themore » refined composition of Rb 0.78Fe 1.35S 2, while the phase with block antiferromagnetic order is absent. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements on the same crystal with the pure stripe phase reveal that the electronic structure is gapped at the Fermi level with a gap larger than 0.325 eV. The data collectively demonstrate that the extra 10% iron vacancies in addition to the rhombic iron vacancy order effectively impede the formation of the block antiferromagnetic phase; the data also suggest that the stripe antiferromagnetic phase with rhombic iron vacancy order is a Mott insulator.« less
Quantum phase transition between cluster and antiferromagnetic states
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Son, W.; Amico, L.; Fazio, R.; Hamma, A.; Pascazio, S.; Vedral, V.
2011-09-01
We study a Hamiltonian system describing a three-spin-1/2 cluster-like interaction competing with an Ising-like exchange. We show that the ground state in the cluster phase possesses symmetry protected topological order. A continuous quantum phase transition occurs as result of the competition between the cluster and Ising terms. At the critical point the Hamiltonian is self-dual. The geometric entanglement is also studied and used to investigate the quantum phase transition. Our findings in one dimension corroborate the analysis of the two-dimensional generalization of the system, indicating, at a mean-field level, the presence of a direct transition between an antiferromagnetic and a valence bond solid ground state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Ki Hoon; Chung, Suk Bum; Park, Kisoo; Park, Je-Geun
2018-05-01
We investigated the topological property of magnon bands in the collinear magnetic orders of zigzag and stripe phases for the antiferromagnetic honeycomb lattice and identified Berry curvature and symmetry constraints on the magnon band structure. Different symmetries of both zigzag and stripe phases lead to different topological properties, in particular, the magnon bands of the stripe phase being disentangled with a finite Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya (DM) term with nonzero spin Chern number. This is corroborated by calculating the spin Nernst effect. Our study establishes the existence of a nontrivial magnon band topology for all observed collinear antiferromagnetic honeycomb lattices in the presence of the DM term.
Observation of antiferromagnetic order collapse in the pressurized insulator LaMnPO
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Guo, Jing; Simonson, Jack; Sun, Liling; Wu, Qi; Guo, Peiwen; Zhang, Chao; Gu, Dachun; Kotliar, Gabriel; Aronson, Meigan; Zhao, Zhongxian
2014-03-01
The emergence of superconductivity in the iron pnictide or cuprate high temperature superconductors usually accompanies the suppression of a long-ranged antiferromagnetic (AFM) order state in a corresponding parent compound by doping or pressurizing. A great deal of effort by doping has been made to find superconductivity in Mn-based compounds, which are thought to bridge the gap between the two families of high temperature superconductors, but the AFM order was not successfully suppressed. Here we report the first observations of the pressure-induced elimination of long-ranged AFM order at ~ 34 GPa and a crossover from an AFM insulating to an AFM metallic state at ~ 20 GPa in LaMnPO single crystals that are iso-structural to the LaFeAsO superconductor by in-situ high pressure resistance and ac susceptibility measurements. These findings are of importance to explore potential superconductivity in Mn-based compounds and to shed new light on the underlying mechanism of high temperature superconductivity.
Observation of antiferromagnetic order collapse in the pressurized insulator LaMnPO
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Guo, Jing; Simonson, J. W.; Sun, Liling; Wu, Qi; Gao, Peiwen; Zhang, Chao; Gu, Dachun; Kotliar, Gabriel; Aronson, Meigan; Zhao, Zhongxian
2013-08-01
The emergence of superconductivity in the iron pnictide or cuprate high temperature superconductors usually accompanies the suppression of a long-ranged antiferromagnetic (AFM) order state in a corresponding parent compound by doping or pressurizing. A great deal of effort by doping has been made to find superconductivity in Mn-based compounds, which are thought to bridge the gap between the two families of high temperature superconductors, but the AFM order was not successfully suppressed. Here we report the first observations of the pressure-induced elimination of long-ranged AFM order at ~ 34 GPa and a crossover from an AFM insulating to an AFM metallic state at ~ 20 GPa in LaMnPO single crystals that are iso-structural to the LaFeAsO superconductor by in-situ high pressure resistance and ac susceptibility measurements. These findings are of importance to explore potential superconductivity in Mn-based compounds and to shed new light on the underlying mechanism of high temperature superconductivity.
Observation of antiferromagnetic order collapse in the pressurized insulator LaMnPO.
Guo, Jing; Simonson, J W; Sun, Liling; Wu, Qi; Gao, Peiwen; Zhang, Chao; Gu, Dachun; Kotliar, Gabriel; Aronson, Meigan; Zhao, Zhongxian
2013-01-01
The emergence of superconductivity in the iron pnictide or cuprate high temperature superconductors usually accompanies the suppression of a long-ranged antiferromagnetic (AFM) order state in a corresponding parent compound by doping or pressurizing. A great deal of effort by doping has been made to find superconductivity in Mn-based compounds, which are thought to bridge the gap between the two families of high temperature superconductors, but the AFM order was not successfully suppressed. Here we report the first observations of the pressure-induced elimination of long-ranged AFM order at ~ 34 GPa and a crossover from an AFM insulating to an AFM metallic state at ~ 20 GPa in LaMnPO single crystals that are iso-structural to the LaFeAsO superconductor by in-situ high pressure resistance and ac susceptibility measurements. These findings are of importance to explore potential superconductivity in Mn-based compounds and to shed new light on the underlying mechanism of high temperature superconductivity.
Magnetic and electrical transport properties of the pyrochlore iridate Bi2-xCoxIr2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Feng, Yuan; Zhu, Shoujin; Bian, Jian; Chen, Feng; Chen, Shiyun; Ma, Cuiling; Liu, Hui; Fang, Baolong
2018-04-01
In the present paper, we have studied the magnetic order and electrical transport properties of frustrated magnet Bi2-xCoxIr2O7 (x = 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6) polycrystalline. The behavior of the electrical resistivity above 50 K in the composites emanate from the electron-electron scattering processes. Grain boundary effects play a dominant role in the conduction process. It is also found from M-T data that the antiferromagnetic interaction and frustration enhances with increasing content of Co. Effective magnetic moments show a possibility of mixed valence state of Co (Co3+ and Co4+). The M-H data of doped samples taken at 2 K show hysteresis loops, which suggests the existence of ferromagnetic interaction originated from canted antiferromagnetic state. The magnetic behavior results from the competition between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interaction at each magnetic site.
Weyl magnons in breathing pyrochlore antiferromagnets
Li, Fei-Ye; Li, Yao-Dong; Kim, Yong Baek; Balents, Leon; Yu, Yue; Chen, Gang
2016-01-01
Frustrated quantum magnets not only provide exotic ground states and unusual magnetic structures, but also support unconventional excitations in many cases. Using a physically relevant spin model for a breathing pyrochlore lattice, we discuss the presence of topological linear band crossings of magnons in antiferromagnets. These are the analogues of Weyl fermions in electronic systems, which we dub Weyl magnons. The bulk Weyl magnon implies the presence of chiral magnon surface states forming arcs at finite energy. We argue that such antiferromagnets present a unique example, in which Weyl points can be manipulated in situ in the laboratory by applied fields. We discuss their appearance specifically in the breathing pyrochlore lattice, and give some general discussion of conditions to find Weyl magnons, and how they may be probed experimentally. Our work may inspire a re-examination of the magnetic excitations in many magnetically ordered systems. PMID:27650053
Weyl magnons in breathing pyrochlore antiferromagnets
Li, Fei-Ye; Li, Yao-Dong; Kim, Yong Baek; ...
2016-09-21
Frustrated quantum magnets not only provide exotic ground states and unusual magnetic structures, but also support unconventional excitations in many cases. Using a physically relevant spin model for a breathing pyrochlore lattice, we discuss the presence of topological linear band crossings of magnons in antiferromagnets. These are the analogues of Weyl fermions in electronic systems, which we dub Weyl magnons. The bulk Weyl magnon implies the presence of chiral magnon surface states forming arcs at finite energy. We argue that such antiferromagnets present a unique example, in which Weyl points can be manipulated in situ in the laboratory by appliedmore » fields. We discuss their appearance specifically in the breathing pyrochlore lattice, and give some general discussion of conditions to find Weyl magnons, and how they may be probed experimentally. Our work may inspire a re-examination of the magnetic excitations in many magnetically ordered systems.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kämpfer, F.; Bessire, B.; Wirz, M.; Hofmann, C. P.; Jiang, F.-J.; Wiese, U.-J.
2012-02-01
Based on a symmetry analysis of the microscopic Hubbard and t-J models, a systematic low-energy effective field theory is constructed for hole-doped antiferromagnets on the honeycomb lattice. In the antiferromagnetic phase, doped holes are massive due to the spontaneous breakdown of the SU(2)s symmetry, just as nucleons in Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) pick up their mass from spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking. In the broken phase, the effective action contains a single-derivative term, similar to the Shraiman-Siggia term in the square lattice case. Interestingly, an accidental continuous spatial rotation symmetry arises at leading order. As an application of the effective field theory, we consider one-magnon exchange between two holes and the formation of two-hole bound states. As an unambiguous prediction of the effective theory, the wave function for the ground state of two holes bound by magnon exchange exhibits f-wave symmetry.
Antiferromagnetic opto-spintronics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Němec, P.; Fiebig, M.; Kampfrath, T.; Kimel, A. V.
2018-03-01
Control and detection of spin order in ferromagnetic materials is the main principle enabling magnetic information to be stored and read in current technologies. Antiferromagnetic materials, on the other hand, are far less utilized, despite having some appealing features. For instance, the absence of net magnetization and stray fields eliminates crosstalk between neighbouring devices, and the absence of a primary macroscopic magnetization makes spin manipulation in antiferromagnets inherently faster than in ferromagnets. However, control of spins in antiferromagnets requires exceedingly high magnetic fields, and antiferromagnetic order cannot be detected with conventional magnetometry. Here we provide an overview and illustrative examples of how electromagnetic radiation can be used for probing and modification of the magnetic order in antiferromagnets. We also discuss possible research directions that are anticipated to be among the main topics defining the future of this rapidly developing field.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yamashita, Tetsuro; Miyazaki, Ryoichi; Aoki, Yuji; Ohara, Shigeo
2012-03-01
We have succeeded in synthesizing a new Yb-based Kondo lattice system, YbNi3X9 (X = Al, Ga). Our study reveals that YbNi3Al9 shows typical features of a heavy-fermion antiferromagnet with a Néel temperature of TN = 3.4 K. All of the properties reflect a competition between the Kondo effect and the crystalline electric field (CEF) effect. The moderate heavy-fermion state leads to an enhanced Sommerfeld coefficient of 100 mJ/(mol\\cdotK2), even if ordered antiferromagnetically. On the other hand, the isostructural gallide YbNi3Ga9 is an intermediate-valence system with a Kondo temperature of TK = 570 K. A large hybridization scale can overcome the CEF splitting energy, and a moderately heavy Fermi-liquid ground state with high local moment degeneracy should form at low temperatures. Note that the quality of single-crystalline YbNi3X9 is extremely high compared with those of other Yb-based Kondo lattice compounds. We conclude that YbNi3X9 is a suitable system for investigating the electronic structure of Yb-based Kondo lattice systems from a heavy-fermion system with an antiferromagnetically ordered ground state to an intermediate-valence system.
Spectral evolution with doping of an antiferromagnetic Mott state
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wu, Huan-Kuang; Lee, Ting-Kuo
2017-01-01
Since the discovery of half-filled cuprate to be a Mott insulator, the excitation spectra above the chemical potential for the unoccupied states has attracted much research attention. There were many theoretical works using different numerical techniques to study this problem, but many have reached different conclusions. One of the reasons is the lack of very detailed high-resolution experimental results for the theories to be compared with. Recently, the scanning tunneling spectroscopy [P. Cai et al., Nat. Phys. 12, 1047 (2016), 10.1038/nphys3840; C. Ye et al., Nat. Commun. 4, 1365 (2013), 10.1038/ncomms2369] on lightly doped Mott insulator with an antiferromagnetic order found the presence of in-gap states with energy of order half an eV above the chemical potential. The measured spectral properties with doping are not quite consistent with earlier theoretical works. Although the experiment has disorder and localization effect, but for the energy scale we will study here, a model without disorder is sufficed to illustrate the underlying physics. We perform a diagonalization method on top of the variational Monte Carlo calculation to study the evolution of antiferromagnetic Mott state with doped hole concentration in the Hubbard model. Our results found in-gap states that behave similarly with ones reported by STS. These in-gap states acquire a substantial amount of dynamical spectral weight transferred from the upper Hubbard band. The in-gap states move toward chemical potential with increasing spectral weight as doping increases. Our result also provides information about the energy scale of these in-gap states in relation with the Coulomb coupling strength U .
Magnetostriction-driven ground-state stabilization in 2H perovskites
Porter, D. G.; Senn, M. S.; Khalyavin, D. D.; ...
2016-10-04
In this paper, the magnetic ground state of Sr 3ARuO 6, with A =(Li,Na), is studied using neutron diffraction, resonant x-ray scattering, and laboratory characterization measurements of high-quality crystals. Combining these results allows us to observe the onset of long-range magnetic order and distinguish the symmetrically allowed magnetic models, identifying in-plane antiferromagnetic moments and a small ferromagnetic component along the c axis. While the existence of magnetic domains masks the particular in-plane direction of the moments, it has been possible to elucidate the ground state using symmetry considerations. We find that due to the lack of local anisotropy, antisymmetric exchangemore » interactions control the magnetic order, first through structural distortions that couple to in-plane antiferromagnetic moments and second through a high-order magnetoelastic coupling that lifts the degeneracy of the in-plane moments. Finally, the symmetry considerations used to rationalize the magnetic ground state are very general and will apply to many systems in this family, such as Ca 3ARuO 6, with A = (Li,Na), and Ca 3LiOsO 6 whose magnetic ground states are still not completely understood.« less
Spectroscopic fingerprints for charge localization in the organic semiconductor (DOEO)4[HgBr4]·TCE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koplak, Oksana V.; Chernenkaya, Alisa; Medjanik, Katerina; Brambilla, Alberto; Gloskovskii, Andrei; Calloni, Alberto; Elmers, Hans-Joachim; Schönhense, Gerd; Ciccacci, Franco; Morgunov, Roman B.
2015-05-01
Changes of the electronic structure accompanied by charge localization and a transition to an antiferromagnetic ground state were observed in the organic semiconductor (DOEO)4[HgBr4]·TCE. Localization starts in the temperature region of about 150 K and the antiferromagnetic state occurs below 60 K. The magnetic moment of the crystal contains contributions of inclusions (droplets), and individual paramagnetic centers formed by localized holes and free charge carriers at 2 K. Two types of inclusions of 100-400 nm and 2-5 nm sizes were revealed by transmission electron microscopy. Studying the temperature- and angular dependence of electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra revealed fingerprints of antiferromagnetic contributions as well as paramagnetic resonance spectra of individual localized charge carriers. The results point on coexistence of antiferromagnetic long and short range order as evident from a second ESR line. Photoelectron spectroscopy in the VUV, soft and hard X-ray range shows temperature-dependent effects upon crossing the critical temperatures around 60 K and 150 K. The substantially different probing depths of soft and hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy yield information on the surface termination. The combined investigation using complementary methods at the same sample reveals the close relation of changes in the transport properties and in the energy distribution of electronic states.
Magnetic states, correlation effects and metal-insulator transition in FCC lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Timirgazin, M. A.; Igoshev, P. A.; Arzhnikov, A. K.; Irkhin, V. Yu
2016-12-01
The ground-state magnetic phase diagram (including collinear and spiral states) of the single-band Hubbard model for the face-centered cubic lattice and related metal-insulator transition (MIT) are investigated within the slave-boson approach by Kotliar and Ruckenstein. The correlation-induced electron spectrum narrowing and a comparison with a generalized Hartree-Fock approximation allow one to estimate the strength of correlation effects. This, as well as the MIT scenario, depends dramatically on the ratio of the next-nearest and nearest electron hopping integrals {{t}\\prime}/t . In contrast with metallic state, possessing substantial band narrowing, insulator one is only weakly correlated. The magnetic (Slater) scenario of MIT is found to be superior over the Mott one. Unlike simple and body-centered cubic lattices, MIT is the first order transition (discontinuous) for most {{t}\\prime}/t . The insulator state is type-II or type-III antiferromagnet, and the metallic state is spin-spiral, collinear antiferromagnet or paramagnet depending on {{t}\\prime}/t . The picture of magnetic ordering is compared with that in the standard localized-electron (Heisenberg) model.
4-spin plaquette singlet state in the Shastry-Sutherland compound SrCu2(BO3)2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zayed, M. E.; Rüegg, Ch.; Larrea J., J.; Läuchli, A. M.; Panagopoulos, C.; Saxena, S. S.; Ellerby, M.; McMorrow, D. F.; Strässle, Th.; Klotz, S.; Hamel, G.; Sadykov, R. A.; Pomjakushin, V.; Boehm, M.; Jiménez-Ruiz, M.; Schneidewind, A.; Pomjakushina, E.; Stingaciu, M.; Conder, K.; Rønnow, H. M.
2017-10-01
The study of interacting spin systems is of fundamental importance for modern condensed-matter physics. On frustrated lattices, magnetic exchange interactions cannot be simultaneously satisfied, and often give rise to competing exotic ground states. The frustrated two-dimensional Shastry-Sutherland lattice realized by SrCu2(BO3)2 (refs ,) is an important test case for our understanding of quantum magnetism. It was constructed to have an exactly solvable 2-spin dimer singlet ground state within a certain range of exchange parameters and frustration. While the exact dimer state and the antiferromagnetic order at both ends of the phase diagram are well known, the ground state and spin correlations in the intermediate frustration range have been widely debated. We report here the first experimental identification of the conjectured plaquette singlet intermediate phase in SrCu2(BO3)2. It is observed by inelastic neutron scattering after pressure tuning to 21.5 kbar. This gapped singlet state leads to a transition to long-range antiferromagnetic order above 40 kbar, consistent with the existence of a deconfined quantum critical point.
Ordering process in the diffusively coupled logistic lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Conrado, Claudine V.; Bohr, Tomas
1991-08-01
We study the ordering process in a lattice of diffusively coupled logistic maps for increasing lattice size. Within a window of parameters, the system goes into a weakly chaotic state with long range "antiferromagnetic" order. This happens for arbitrary lattice size L and the ordering time behaves as t ~ L2 as we would expect from a picture of diffusing defects.
NMR studies of the helical antiferromagnetic compound EuCo2P2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Higa, N.; Ding, Q.-P.; Kubota, F.; Uehara, H.; Yogi, M.; Furukawa, Y.; Sangeetha, N. S.; Johnston, D. C.; Nakamura, A.; Hedo, M.; Nakama, T.; Ōnuki, Y.
2018-05-01
In EuCo2P2, 4f electron spins of Eu2+ ions order antiferromagnetically below a Néel temperature TN = 66.5 K . The magnetic structure below TN was reported to be helical with the helix axis along the c-axis from the neutron diffraction study. We report the results of 153Eu, 59Co and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on EuCo2P2 using a single crystal and a powdered sample. In the antiferromagnetic (AFM) state, we succeeded in observing 153Eu, 59Co and 31P NMR spectra in zero magnetic field. The sharp 153Eu zero field NMR (ZF NMR) lines indicate homogeneous Eu ordered moment. The 59Co and 31P ZF NMR spectra showed an asymmetric spectral shape, indicating a distribution of the internal magnetic induction at each nuclear position. The AFM propagation vector k characterizing the helical AFM state can be determined from the internal magnetic induction at Co site. We have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k distributed from (0, 0, 0.86)2π/c to (0, 0, 0.73)2π/c, where c is the lattice parameter.
Anisotropic antiferromagnetic order in the spin-orbit coupled trigonal-lattice Ca2Sr2IrO6
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sheng, Jieming; Ye, Feng; Hoffmann, Christina; Cooper, Valentino R.; Okamoto, Satoshi; Terzic, Jasminka; Zheng, Hao; Zhao, Hengdi; Cao, G.
2018-06-01
We used single-crystal x-ray and neutron diffraction to investigate the crystal and magnetic structures of trigonal lattice iridate Ca2Sr2IrO6 . The crystal structure is determined to be R 3 ¯ with two distinct Ir sites. The system exhibits long-range antiferromagnetic order below TN=13.1 K. The magnetic wave vector is identified as (0,0.5,1) with ferromagnetic coupling along the a axis and antiferromagnetic correlation along the b axis. Spins align dominantly within the basal plane along the [1,2,0] direction and tilt 34∘ toward the c axis. The ordered moment is 0.66(3) μB/Ir, larger than other iridates where iridium ions form corner- or edge-sharing IrO6 octahedral networks. The tilting angle is reduced to ≈19∘ when a magnetic field of 4.9 T is applied along the c axis. Density functional theory calculations confirm that the experimentally determined magnetic configuration is the most probable ground state with an insulating gap ˜0.5 eV.
Terahertz electrical writing speed in an antiferromagnetic memory
Kašpar, Zdeněk; Campion, Richard P.; Baumgartner, Manuel; Sinova, Jairo; Kužel, Petr; Müller, Melanie; Kampfrath, Tobias
2018-01-01
The speed of writing of state-of-the-art ferromagnetic memories is physically limited by an intrinsic gigahertz threshold. Recently, realization of memory devices based on antiferromagnets, in which spin directions periodically alternate from one atomic lattice site to the next has moved research in an alternative direction. We experimentally demonstrate at room temperature that the speed of reversible electrical writing in a memory device can be scaled up to terahertz using an antiferromagnet. A current-induced spin-torque mechanism is responsible for the switching in our memory devices throughout the 12-order-of-magnitude range of writing speeds from hertz to terahertz. Our work opens the path toward the development of memory-logic technology reaching the elusive terahertz band. PMID:29740601
Structural chemistry and magnetic properties of the perovskite Sr{sub 3}Fe{sub 2}TeO{sub 9}
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Tang, Yawei; Hunter, Emily C.; Battle, Peter D., E-mail: peter.battle@chem.ox.ac.uk
2016-10-15
A polycrystalline sample of perovskite-like Sr{sub 3}Fe{sub 2}TeO{sub 9} has been prepared in a solid-state reaction and studied by a combination of electron microscopy, Mössbauer spectroscopy, magnetometry, X-ray diffraction and neutron diffraction. The majority of the reaction product is shown to be a trigonal phase with a 2:1 ordered arrangement of Fe{sup 3+} and Te{sup 6+} cations. However, the sample is prone to nano-twinning and tetragonal domains with a different pattern of cation ordering exist within many crystallites. Antiferromagnetic ordering exists in the trigonal phase at 300 K and Sr{sub 3}Fe{sub 2}TeO{sub 9} is thus the first example of amore » perovskite with 2:1 trigonal cation ordering to show long-range magnetic order. At 300 K the antiferromagnetic phase coexists with two paramagnetic phases which show spin-glass behaviour below ~80 K. - Graphical abstract: Sr{sub 3}Fe{sub 2}TeO{sub 9} has a 2:1 ordered arrangement of Fe{sup 3+} and Te{sup 6+} cations over the octahedral sites of a perovskite structure and is antiferromagnetic at room temperature. - Highlights: • 2:1 Cation ordering in a trigonal perovskite. • Magnetically ordered trigonal perovskite. • Intergrowth of nanodomains in perovskite microstructure.« less
How to manipulate magnetic states of antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Song, Cheng; You, Yunfeng; Chen, Xianzhe; Zhou, Xiaofeng; Wang, Yuyan; Pan, Feng
2018-03-01
Antiferromagnetic materials, which have drawn considerable attention recently, have fascinating features: they are robust against perturbation, produce no stray fields, and exhibit ultrafast dynamics. Discerning how to efficiently manipulate the magnetic state of an antiferromagnet is key to the development of antiferromagnetic spintronics. In this review, we introduce four main methods (magnetic, strain, electrical, and optical) to mediate the magnetic states and elaborate on intrinsic origins of different antiferromagnetic materials. Magnetic control includes a strong magnetic field, exchange bias, and field cooling, which are traditional and basic. Strain control involves the magnetic anisotropy effect or metamagnetic transition. Electrical control can be divided into two parts, electric field and electric current, both of which are convenient for practical applications. Optical control includes thermal and electronic excitation, an inertia-driven mechanism, and terahertz laser control, with the potential for ultrafast antiferromagnetic manipulation. This review sheds light on effective usage of antiferromagnets and provides a new perspective on antiferromagnetic spintronics.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Bishop, Christopher B.; Moreo, Adriana; Dagotto, Elbio
2016-09-08
The bicollinear antiferromagnetic order experimentally observed in FeTe is shown to be stabilized by the coupling g ~ 12 between monoclinic lattice distortions and the spin-nematic order parameter with B 2g symmetry, within a three-orbital spin-fermion model studied with Monte Carlo techniques. A finite but small value of g ~ 12 is required, with a concomitant lattice distortion compatible with experiments, and a tetragonal-monoclinic transition strongly first order. Remarkably, the bicollinear state found here displays a planar resistivity with the reversed puzzling anisotropy discovered in transport experiments. Orthorhombic distortions are also incorporated, and phase diagrams interpolating between pnictides and chalcogenidesmore » are presented. Here, we conclude that the spin-lattice coupling we introduce is sufficient to explain the challenging properties of FeTe.« less
Bulk magnetic properties of La1-xCaxMnO3 (0⩽x⩽0.14) : Signatures of local ferromagnetic order
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Terashita, Hirotoshi; Neumeier, J. J.
2005-04-01
We report the bulk magnetic properties of hole-doped La1-xCaxMnO3 (0⩽x⩽0.14) in the paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic regions; the Mn4+ concentration was determined with chemical analysis. Significant enhancement of the effective paramagnetic moment illustrates the existence of ferromagnetic clusters (polarons). The data reveal a distinct crossover in the paramagnetic region, signifying competition between ferromagnetic clusters and antiferromagnetic correlations associated with the low-temperature magnetically ordered state. The results suggest similarity in the magnetic properties at low temperatures between hole-doped LaMnO3 and electron-doped CaMnO3 .
Spin transport and spin torque in antiferromagnetic devices
Zelezny, J.; Wadley, P.; Olejnik, K.; ...
2018-03-02
Ferromagnets are key materials for sensing and memory applications. In contrast, antiferromagnets which represent the more common form of magnetically ordered materials, have found less practical application beyond their use for establishing reference magnetic orientations via exchange bias. This might change in the future due to the recent progress in materials research and discoveries of antiferromagnetic spintronic phenomena suitable for device applications. Experimental demonstration of the electrical switching and detection of the Néel order open a route towards memory devices based on antiferromagnets. Apart from the radiation and magnetic-field hardness, memory cells fabricated from antiferromagnets can be inherently multilevel, whichmore » could be used for neuromorphic computing. Switching speeds attainable in antiferromagnets far exceed those of ferromagnetic and semiconductor memory technologies. Here we review the recent progress in electronic spin-transport and spin-torque phenomena in antiferromagnets that are dominantly of the relativistic quantum mechanical origin. We discuss their utility in pure antiferromagnetic or hybrid ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic memory devices.« less
Spin transport and spin torque in antiferromagnetic devices
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zelezny, J.; Wadley, P.; Olejnik, K.
Ferromagnets are key materials for sensing and memory applications. In contrast, antiferromagnets which represent the more common form of magnetically ordered materials, have found less practical application beyond their use for establishing reference magnetic orientations via exchange bias. This might change in the future due to the recent progress in materials research and discoveries of antiferromagnetic spintronic phenomena suitable for device applications. Experimental demonstration of the electrical switching and detection of the Néel order open a route towards memory devices based on antiferromagnets. Apart from the radiation and magnetic-field hardness, memory cells fabricated from antiferromagnets can be inherently multilevel, whichmore » could be used for neuromorphic computing. Switching speeds attainable in antiferromagnets far exceed those of ferromagnetic and semiconductor memory technologies. Here we review the recent progress in electronic spin-transport and spin-torque phenomena in antiferromagnets that are dominantly of the relativistic quantum mechanical origin. We discuss their utility in pure antiferromagnetic or hybrid ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic memory devices.« less
Spin transport and spin torque in antiferromagnetic devices
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Železný, J.; Wadley, P.; Olejník, K.; Hoffmann, A.; Ohno, H.
2018-03-01
Ferromagnets are key materials for sensing and memory applications. In contrast, antiferromagnets, which represent the more common form of magnetically ordered materials, have found less practical application beyond their use for establishing reference magnetic orientations via exchange bias. This might change in the future due to the recent progress in materials research and discoveries of antiferromagnetic spintronic phenomena suitable for device applications. Experimental demonstration of the electrical switching and detection of the Néel order open a route towards memory devices based on antiferromagnets. Apart from the radiation and magnetic-field hardness, memory cells fabricated from antiferromagnets can be inherently multilevel, which could be used for neuromorphic computing. Switching speeds attainable in antiferromagnets far exceed those of ferromagnetic and semiconductor memory technologies. Here, we review the recent progress in electronic spin-transport and spin-torque phenomena in antiferromagnets that are dominantly of the relativistic quantum-mechanical origin. We discuss their utility in pure antiferromagnetic or hybrid ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic memory devices.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Higa, Nonoka; Ding, Qing -Ping; Yogi, Mamoru
Recently, Q.-P. Ding et al. reported that their nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study on EuCo 2As 2 successfully characterized the antiferromagnetic (AFM) propagation vector of the incommensurate helix AFM state, showing that NMR is a unique tool for determination of the spin structures in incommensurate helical AFMs. Motivated by this work, we have carried out 153Eu, 31P, and 59Co NMR measurements on the helical antiferromagnet EuCo 2P 2 with an AFM ordering temperature T N = 66.5 K. An incommensurate helical AFM structure was clearly confirmed by 153Eu and 31P NMR spectra on single-crystalline EuCo 2P 2 in zero magneticmore » field at 1.6 K and its external magnetic field dependence. Furthermore, based on 59Co NMR data in both the paramagnetic and incommensurate AFM states, we have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k = (0,0,0.73±0.09)2π/c, where c is the c-axis lattice parameter. As a result, the temperature dependence of k is also discussed.« less
Higa, Nonoka; Ding, Qing -Ping; Yogi, Mamoru; ...
2017-07-06
Recently, Q.-P. Ding et al. reported that their nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study on EuCo 2As 2 successfully characterized the antiferromagnetic (AFM) propagation vector of the incommensurate helix AFM state, showing that NMR is a unique tool for determination of the spin structures in incommensurate helical AFMs. Motivated by this work, we have carried out 153Eu, 31P, and 59Co NMR measurements on the helical antiferromagnet EuCo 2P 2 with an AFM ordering temperature T N = 66.5 K. An incommensurate helical AFM structure was clearly confirmed by 153Eu and 31P NMR spectra on single-crystalline EuCo 2P 2 in zero magneticmore » field at 1.6 K and its external magnetic field dependence. Furthermore, based on 59Co NMR data in both the paramagnetic and incommensurate AFM states, we have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k = (0,0,0.73±0.09)2π/c, where c is the c-axis lattice parameter. As a result, the temperature dependence of k is also discussed.« less
Atomic-scale inversion of spin polarization at an organic-antiferromagnetic interface
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Caffrey, Nuala M.; Ferriani, Paolo; Marocchi, Simone; Heinze, Stefan
2013-10-01
Using first-principles calculations, we show that the magnetic properties of a two-dimensional antiferromagnetic transition-metal surface are modified on the atomic scale by the adsorption of small organic molecules. We consider benzene (C6H6), cyclooctatetraene (C8H8), and a small transition-metal-benzene complex (BzV) adsorbed on a single atomic layer of Mn deposited on the W(110) surface—a surface which exhibits a nearly antiferromagnetic alignment of the magnetic moments in adjacent Mn rows. Due to the spin dependent hybridization of the molecular pz orbitals with the d states of the Mn monolayer, there is a significant reduction of the magnetic moments in the Mn film. Furthermore, the spin polarization at this organic-antiferromagnetic interface is found to be modulated on the atomic scale, both enhanced and inverted, as a result of the molecular adsorption. We show that this effect can be resolved by spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy (SP-STM). Our simulated SP-STM images display a spatially dependent spin resolved vacuum charge density above an adsorbed molecule—i.e., different regions above the molecule sustain different signs of spin polarization. While states with s and p symmetry dominate the vacuum charge density in the vicinity of the Fermi energy for the clean magnetic surface, we demonstrate that after a molecule is adsorbed those d states, which are normally suppressed due to their symmetry, can play a crucial role in the vacuum due to their interaction with the molecular orbitals. We also model the effect of small deviations from perfect antiferromagnetic ordering, induced by the slight canting of magnetic moments due to the spin spiral ground state of Mn/W(110).
Magnetic Phase Transitions in NdCoAsO
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
McGuire, Michael A; Gout, Delphine J; Garlea, Vasile O
2010-01-01
NdCoAsO undergoes three magnetic phase transitions below room temperature. Here we report the results of our experimental investigation of this compound, including determination of the crystal and magnetic structures using powder neutron diffraction, as well as measurements of electrical resistivity, thermal conductivity, Seebeck coefficient, magnetization, and heat capacity. These results show that upon cooling a ferromagnetic state emerges near 69 K with a small saturation moment of -0.2{micro}{sub B}, likely on Co atoms. At 14 K the material enters an antiferromagnetic state with propagation vector (0 0 1/2) and small ordered moments (-0.4{micro}{sub B}) on Co and Nd. Near 3.5more » K a third transition is observed, and corresponds to the antiferromagnetic ordering of larger moments on Nd, with the same propagation vector. The ordered moment on Nd reaches 1.39(5){micro}{sub B} at 300 mK. Anomalies in the magnetization, electrical resistivity, and heat capacity are observed at all three magnetic phase transitions.« less
Spin Hartree-Fock approach to studying quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnets in low dimensions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Werth, A.; Kopietz, P.; Tsyplyatyev, O.
2018-05-01
We construct a new mean-field theory for a quantum (spin-1/2) Heisenberg antiferromagnet in one (1D) and two (2D) dimensions using a Hartree-Fock decoupling of the four-point correlation functions. We show that the solution to the self-consistency equations based on two-point correlation functions does not produce any unphysical finite-temperature phase transition, in accord with the Mermin-Wagner theorem, unlike the common approach based on the mean-field equation for the order parameter. The next-neighbor spin-spin correlation functions, calculated within this approach, reproduce closely the strong renormalization by quantum fluctuations obtained via a Bethe ansatz in 1D and a small renormalization of the classical antiferromagnetic state in 2D. The heat capacity approximates with reasonable accuracy the full Bethe ansatz result at all temperatures in 1D. In 2D, we obtain a reduction of the peak height in the heat capacity at a finite temperature that is accessible by high-order 1 /T expansions.
Producing coherent excitations in pumped Mott antiferromagnetic insulators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Yao; Claassen, Martin; Moritz, B.; Devereaux, T. P.
2017-12-01
Nonequilibrium dynamics in correlated materials has attracted attention due to the possibility of characterizing, tuning, and creating complex ordered states. To understand the photoinduced microscopic dynamics, especially the linkage under realistic pump conditions between transient states and remnant elementary excitations, we performed nonperturbative simulations of various time-resolved spectroscopies. We used the Mott antiferromagnetic insulator as a model platform. The transient dynamics of multiparticle excitations can be attributed to the interplay between Floquet virtual states and a modification of the density of states, in which interactions induce a spectral weight transfer. Using an autocorrelation of the time-dependent spectral function, we show that resonance of the virtual states with the upper Hubbard band in the Mott insulator provides the route towards manipulating the electronic distribution and modifying charge and spin excitations. Our results link transient dynamics to the nature of many-body excitations and provide an opportunity to design nonequilibrium states of matter via tuned laser pulses.
Antidamping-Torque-Induced Switching in Biaxial Antiferromagnetic Insulators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, X. Z.; Zarzuela, R.; Zhang, J.; Song, C.; Zhou, X. F.; Shi, G. Y.; Li, F.; Zhou, H. A.; Jiang, W. J.; Pan, F.; Tserkovnyak, Y.
2018-05-01
We investigate the current-induced switching of the Néel order in NiO (001 )/Pt heterostructures, which is manifested electrically via the spin Hall magnetoresistance. Significant reversible changes in the longitudinal and transverse resistances are found at room temperature for a current threshold lying in the range of 1 07 A /cm2 . The order-parameter switching is ascribed to the antiferromagnetic dynamics triggered by the (current-induced) antidamping torque, which orients the Néel order towards the direction of the writing current. This is in stark contrast to the case of antiferromagnets such as Mn2Au and CuMnAs, where fieldlike torques induced by the Edelstein effect drive the Néel switching, therefore resulting in an orthogonal alignment between the Néel order and the writing current. Our findings can be readily generalized to other biaxial antiferromagnets, providing broad opportunities for all-electrical writing and readout in antiferromagnetic spintronics.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Park, J. T.; Inosov, D. S.; Sun, G. L.
2009-03-20
Here we present a combined study of the slightly underdoped novel pnictide superconductor Ba{sub 1-x}K{sub x}Fe{sub 2}As{sub 2} by means of x-ray powder diffraction, neutron scattering, muon-spin rotation ({mu}SR), and magnetic force microscopy (MFM). Static antiferromagnetic order sets in below T{sub m}{approx_equal}70 K as inferred from the neutron scattering and zero-field-{mu}SR data. Transverse-field {mu}SR below T{sub c} shows a coexistence of magnetically ordered and nonmagnetic states, which is also confirmed by MFM imaging. We explain such coexistence by electronic phase separation into antiferromagnetic and superconducting- or normal-state regions on a lateral scale of several tens of nanometers. Our findings indicatemore » that such mesoscopic phase separation can be considered an intrinsic property of some iron pnictide superconductors.« less
Antiferromagnetic order in the Hubbard model on the Penrose lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koga, Akihisa; Tsunetsugu, Hirokazu
2017-12-01
We study an antiferromagnetic order in the ground state of the half-filled Hubbard model on the Penrose lattice and investigate the effects of quasiperiodic lattice structure. In the limit of infinitesimal Coulomb repulsion U →+0 , the staggered magnetizations persist to be finite, and their values are determined by confined states, which are strictly localized with thermodynamics degeneracy. The magnetizations exhibit an exotic spatial pattern, and have the same sign in each of cluster regions, the size of which ranges from 31 sites to infinity. With increasing U , they continuously evolve to those of the corresponding spin model in the U =∞ limit. In both limits of U , local magnetizations exhibit a fairly intricate spatial pattern that reflects the quasiperiodic structure, but the pattern differs between the two limits. We have analyzed this pattern change by a mode analysis by the singular value decomposition method for the fractal-like magnetization pattern projected into the perpendicular space.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Otsuka, Kei; Iikubo, Hideaki; Kogure, Takayuki; Takano, Yoshiki; Hiraki, Ko-ichi; Takahashi, Toshihiro; Cui, Hengbo; Kato, Reizo
2014-05-01
We performed 13C NMR measurements of a selectively 13C isotope-labeled single-crystal sample of a frustrated spin system, β'-Et2Me2P[Pd(dmit)2]2. A long-range antiferromagnetic (AF) ordering below 17 K was confirmed by the observation of NMR spectrum broadening and well split resonance lines at lower temperatures. NMR spectra in the AF state can be well explained by a two sublattice model. From the analysis of the angular dependence of the NMR spectrum, we clarified the magnetic structure in the AF state, where the easy and hard axes are the crystallographic c*- and b-axes, respectively, and the effective localized moments are quite small, ˜0.28 μB/dimer. This suggests a strong quantum fluctuation effect due to magnetic frustrations in a quasi-triangular spin-1/2 system.
Overlap of two topological phases in the antiferromagnetic Potts model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhao, Ran; Ding, Chengxiang; Deng, Youjin
2018-05-01
By controlling the vortex core energy, the three-state ferromagnetic Potts model can exhibit two types of topological paradigms, including the quasi-long-range ordered phase and the vortex lattice phase [Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 097206 (2016), 10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.097206]. Here, using Monte Carlo simulations using an efficient worm algorithm, we show that by controlling the vortex core energy, the antiferromagnetic Potts model can also exhibit the two topological phases, and, more interestingly, the two topological phases can overlap with each other.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Charikova, T. B.; Shelushinina, N. G.; Petukhov, D. S.; Kharus, G. I.; Petukhova, O. E.; Ivanov, A. A.
2017-12-01
The Hall resistance and the magnetoresistance in the mixed state of the Nd2 - x Ce x CuO4 + δ quasi-two-dimensional system near the antiferromagnetic-superconductor (AF-SC) phase transition have been measured at doping levels x = 0.14 and 0.15, and a correlation has been established. This correlation can be analyzed using the following power relationship: ρ xy ( B) [ρ xx ( B)]β. It was found that index β varied from 0.94 ± 0.03 in the region of AF and SC coexistence ( x = 0.14) to 0.6 ± 0.1 in the SC region with the maximum critical temperature ( x = 0.15) at low temperatures and weak magnetic fields. This reduction suggests that the symmetry of carrier pairing changes at the boundary of the transition from the phase of antiferromagnetic ordering and spin density waves to the superconducting phase in the presence of antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations.
Electrical switching of antiferromagnets via strongly spin-orbit coupled materials
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, Xi-Lai; Duan, Xiaopeng; Semenov, Yuriy G.; Kim, Ki Wook
2017-01-01
Electrically controlled ultra-fast switching of an antiferromagnet (AFM) is shown to be realizable by interfacing it with a material of strong spin-orbit coupling. The proximity interaction between the sublattice magnetic moments of a layered AFM and the spin-polarized free electrons at the interface offers an efficient way to manipulate antiferromagnetic states. A quantitative analysis, using the combination with a topological insulator as an example, demonstrates highly reliable 90° and 180° rotations of AFM magnetic states under two different mechanisms of effective torque generation at the interface. The estimated switching speed and energy requirement are in the ps and aJ ranges, respectively, which are about two-three orders of magnitude better than the ferromagnetic counterparts. The observed differences in the magnetization dynamics may explain the disparate characteristic responses. Unlike the usual precessional/chiral motions in the ferromagnets, those of the AFMs can essentially be described as a damped oscillator with a more direct path. The impact of random thermal fluctuations is also examined.
Fratino, L.; Charlebois, M.; Sémon, P.; ...
2017-12-19
Recent quantum-gas microscopy of ultracold atoms and scanning tunneling microscopy of the cuprates reveal new detailed information about doped Mott antiferromagnets, which can be compared with calculations. Using cellular dynamical mean-field theory, we map out the antiferromagnetic (AF) phase of the two-dimensional Hubbard model as a function of interaction strength U, hole doping δ, and temperature T . The Néel phase boundary is nonmonotonic as a function of U and δ. Frustration induced by second-neighbor hopping reduces Néel order more effectively at small U. The doped AF is stabilized at large U by kinetic energy and at small U bymore » potential energy. The transition between the AF insulator and the doped metallic AF is continuous. At large U, we find in-gap states similar to those observed in scanning tunneling microscopy. Finally, we predict that, contrary to the Hubbard bands, these states are only slightly spin polarized.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fratino, L.; Charlebois, M.; Sémon, P.; Sordi, G.; Tremblay, A.-M. S.
2017-12-01
Recent quantum-gas microscopy of ultracold atoms and scanning tunneling microscopy of the cuprates reveal new detailed information about doped Mott antiferromagnets, which can be compared with calculations. Using cellular dynamical mean-field theory, we map out the antiferromagnetic (AF) phase of the two-dimensional Hubbard model as a function of interaction strength U , hole doping δ , and temperature T . The Néel phase boundary is nonmonotonic as a function of U and δ . Frustration induced by second-neighbor hopping reduces Néel order more effectively at small U . The doped AF is stabilized at large U by kinetic energy and at small U by potential energy. The transition between the AF insulator and the doped metallic AF is continuous. At large U , we find in-gap states similar to those observed in scanning tunneling microscopy. We predict that, contrary to the Hubbard bands, these states are only slightly spin polarized.
Kermarrec, E.; Marjerrison, Casey A.; Thompson, C. M.; ...
2015-02-26
Here we report the crystal structure, magnetization, and neutron scattering measurements on the double perovskite Ba 2 YOsO 6. The Fmmore » $$\\bar{3}$$m space group is found both at 290 K and 3.5 K with cell constants a 0=8.3541(4) Å and 8.3435(4) Å, respectively. Os 5+ (5d 3) ions occupy a nondistorted, geometrically frustrated face-centered-cubic (fcc) lattice. A Curie-Weiss temperature θ ~₋700 K suggests the presence of a large antiferromagnetic interaction and a high degree of magnetic frustration. A magnetic transition to long-range antiferromagnetic order, consistent with a type-I fcc state below T N~69 K, is revealed by magnetization, Fisher heat capacity, and elastic neutron scattering, with an ordered moment of 1.65(6) μ B on Os 5+. The ordered moment is much reduced from either the expected spin-only value of ~3 μ B or the value appropriate to 4d 3 Ru 5+ in isostructural Ba 2 YRuO 6 of 2.2(1) μ B, suggesting a role for spin-orbit coupling (SOC). Triple-axis neutron scattering measurements of the order parameter suggest an additional first-order transition at T=67.45 K, and the existence of a second-ordered state. We find time-of-flight inelastic neutron results reveal a large spin gap Δ~17 meV, unexpected for an orbitally quenched, d 3 electronic configuration. In conclusion, we discuss this in the context of the ~5 meV spin gap observed in the related Ru 5+,4d 3 cubic double perovskite Ba 2YRuO 6, and attribute the ~3 times larger gap to stronger SOC present in this heavier, 5d, osmate system.« less
Generalized spin-wave theory: Application to the bilinear-biquadratic model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Muniz, Rodrigo A.; Kato, Yasuyuki; Batista, Cristian D.
2014-08-01
We present a mathematical framework for the multi-boson approach that has been used several times for treating spin systems. We demonstrate that the multi-boson approach corresponds to a generalization of the traditional spin-wave theory from SU(2) to SU(N), where N is the number of states of the local degree of freedom. Low-energy excitations are waves of the local order parameter that fluctuates in the SU(N) space of unitary transformations of the local spin states, instead of the SU(2) space of local spin rotations. Since the generators of the SU(N) group can be represented as bilinear forms in N-flavored bosons, the low-energy modes of the generalized spin-wave theory (GSWT) are described with N-1 different bosons, which provide a more accurate description of low-energy excitations even for the usual ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic phases. The generalization enables the treatment of quantum spin systems whose ground states exhibit multipolar ordering as well as the detection of instabilities of magnetically ordered states (dipolar ordering) towards higher multipolar orderings. We illustrate the advantages of the GSWT by applying it to a bilinear-biquadratic model of arbitrary spin S on hypercubic lattices, and then analyzing the spectrum of dipolar phases in order to find their instabilities. In contrast to the known results for S=1 when the biquadratic term in the Hamiltonian is negative, we find that there is no nematic phase between the ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic orderings for S>1.
Magnetic Properties of Heavy Fermion Compound Ce5Si4 with Chiral Structure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sato, Yoshiki J.; Shimizu, Yusei; Nakamura, Ai; Homma, Yoshiya; Li, Dexin; Maurya, Arvind; Honda, Fuminori; Aoki, Dai
2018-07-01
The low-temperature magnetic properties of Ce5Si4 with a chiral structure have been studied by electrical resistivity, heat capacity, and magnetization measurements using single-crystalline samples. It is found that Ce5Si4 is an antiferromagnet with moderately correlated electronic states. The resistivity decreases strongly under magnetic fields, indicating scaling behavior based on the Coqblin-Schrieffer model. The obtained characteristic energy scale of the Kondo effect is clearly anisotropic for the magnetic field H ∥ a-axis and H ∥ c-axis in the tetragonal structure, possibly related to the anisotropic antiferromagnetic phase. Furthermore, in the antiferromagnetic phase, a shoulderlike crossover anomaly is observed in C/T. A possible scenario is that non-ordered Ce atoms exist even below TN in this chiral system.
Origin of in-plane anisotropic resistivity in the antiferromagnetic phase of Fe1 +xTe
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kaneshita, Eiji; Tohyama, Takami
2016-07-01
Motivated by a recent experimental report on in-plane anisotropic resistivity in the double-striped antiferromagnetic phase of FeTe, we theoretically calculate in-plane resistivity by applying a memory function approach to the ordered phase. We find that the resistivity is larger along an antiferromagnetically ordered direction than along a ferromagnetically ordered one, consistent with experimental observation. The anisotropic results are mainly contributed from Drude weight, whose behavior is attributed to Fermi surface topology of the ordered phase.
Volume-wise destruction of the antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state through quantum tuning.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Uemura, Yasutomo
RENiO3 (RE = rare-earth element) and V2O3 are archetypal Mott insulator systems. When tuned by chemical substitution (RENiO3) or hydrostatic pressure (V2O3) , they exhibit a quantum phase transition (QPT) between an antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state and a paramagnetic metallic state. We demonstrate through muon spin relaxation/rotation (μSR) experiments that the QPT in RENiO3 and V2O3 is first order: the magnetically ordered volume fraction decreases to zero at the QPT, resulting in a broad region of intrinsic phase separation, while the ordered magnetic moment retains its full value until it is suddenly destroyed at the QPT. These two cases correspond to the band-width tuning of Mott transitions, and also associated with structural phase transitions, Volume evolutions of antiferromagnetic transition from μSR will be compared to those of structure by x-ray and metallicity by nano optics, in first-order thermal Mott transition in a V2O3 film at ambient pressure. These results will be compared to the process of destruction of magnetic order in another Mott transition system Ba(Co,Ni)S2 in ``filling control'' without structural transition, and in parent compounds of high-Tc cuprates and Fe-based superconductors. We will also discuss roles of first-order quantum transition in generating soft modes relevant to magnetic resonance mode in unconventional superconductors. Work performed in collaboration with the groups of: J.A. Alonso (Madrid), H. Kageyama (Kyoto). E. Morenzoni (PSI), G.M. Luke (McMaster), C.Q. Jin (IOP Beijing), F.L. Ning (Zhejian), S.J.L. Billinge (Columbia), S. Shamoto, W. Higemoto (JAEA), A. Fujimori (Tokyo), A. Gauzzi (Paris), R. de Renzi (Parma), G. Kotliar (Rutgers), M. Imada (Tokyo), D. Basov (UCSD), I, Schuller (UCSD). supported by NSF DMR-1610633 and DMR-1436095 (DMREF).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Reim, J. D.; Rosén, E.; Zaharko, O.; Mostovoy, M.; Robert, J.; Valldor, M.; Schweika, W.
2018-04-01
The hexagonal swedenborgite, CaBaCo2Fe2O7 , is a chiral frustrated antiferromagnet, in which magnetic ions form alternating kagome and triangular layers. We observe a long-range √{3 }×√{3 } antiferromagnetic order setting in below TN=160 K by neutron diffraction on single crystals of CaBaCo2Fe2O7 . Both magnetization and polarized neutron single crystal diffraction measurements show that close to TN spins lie predominantly in the a b plane, while upon cooling the spin structure becomes increasingly canted due to Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions. The ordered structure can be described and refined within the magnetic space group P 31 m' . Diffuse scattering between the magnetic peaks reveals that the spin order is partial. Monte Carlo simulations based on a Heisenberg model with two nearest-neighbor exchange interactions show a similar diffuse scattering and coexistence of the √{3 }×√{3 } order with disorder. The coexistence can be explained by the freedom to vary spins without affecting the long-range order, which gives rise to ground-state degeneracy. Polarization analysis of the magnetic peaks indicates the presence of long-period cycloidal spin correlations resulting from the broken inversion symmetry of the lattice, in agreement with our symmetry analysis.
Importance of doping and frustration in itinerant Fe-doped Cr 2Al
Susner, M. A.; Parker, D. S.; Sefat, A. S.
2015-05-12
We performed an experimental and theoretical study comparing the effects of Fe-doping of Cr 2Al, an antiferromagnet with a N el temperature of 670 K, with known results on Fe-doping of antiferromagnetic bcc Cr. (Cr 1-xFe x) 2Al materials are found to exhibit a rapid suppression of antiferromagnetic order with the presence of Fe, decreasing T N to 170 K for x=0.10. Antiferromagnetic behavior disappears entirely at x≈0.125 after which point increasing paramagnetic behavior is exhibited. Moreover, this is unlike the effects of Fe doping of bcc antiferromagnetic Cr, in which T N gradually decreases followed by the appearance ofmore » a ferromagnetic state. Theoretical calculations explain that the Cr 2Al-Fe suppression of magnetic order originates from two effects: the first is band narrowing caused by doping of additional electrons from Fe substitution that weakens itinerant magnetism; the second is magnetic frustration of the Cr itinerant moments in Fe-substituted Cr 2Al. In pure-phase Cr 2Al, the Cr moments have an antiparallel alignment; however, these are destroyed through Fe substitution and the preference of Fe for parallel alignment with Cr. This is unlike bulk Fe-doped Cr alloys in which the Fe anti-aligns with the Cr atoms, and speaks to the importance of the Al atoms in the magnetic structure of Cr 2Al and Fe-doped Cr 2Al.« less
Emergent ferromagnetism and T -linear scattering in USb 2 at high pressure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jeffries, Jason R.; Stillwell, Ryan L.; Weir, Samuel T.; Vohra, Yogesh K.; Butch, Nicholas P.
2016-05-01
The material USb2 is a correlated, moderately heavy-electron compound within the uranium dipnictide (UX2) series. It is antiferromagnetic with a relatively high transition temperature TN=204 K and a large U-U separation. While the uranium atoms in the lighter dipnictides are considered to be localized, those of USb2 exhibit hybridization and itineracy, promoting uncertainty as to the continuity of the magnetic order within the UX2. We have explored the evolution of the magnetic order by employing magnetotransport measurements as a function of pressure and temperature. We find that the TN in USb2 is enhanced, moving towards that of its smaller sibling UAs2. But, long before reaching a TN as high as UAs2, the antiferromagnetism of USb2 is abruptly destroyed in favor of another magnetic ground state. We identify this pressure-induced ground state as being ferromagnetic based on the appearance of a strong anomalous Hall effect in the transverse resistance in magnetic field. With pressure, this emergent ferromagnetic state is suppressed and ultimately destroyed in favor of a non-Fermi-liquid ground state.
Charge dynamics of the antiferromagnetically ordered Mott insulator
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Han, Xing-Jie; Liu, Yu; Liu, Zhi-Yuan; Li, Xin; Chen, Jing; Liao, Hai-Jun; Xie, Zhi-Yuan; Normand, B.; Xiang, Tao
2016-10-01
We introduce a slave-fermion formulation in which to study the charge dynamics of the half-filled Hubbard model on the square lattice. In this description, the charge degrees of freedom are represented by fermionic holons and doublons and the Mott-insulating characteristics of the ground state are the consequence of holon-doublon bound-state formation. The bosonic spin degrees of freedom are described by the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model, yielding long-ranged (Néel) magnetic order at zero temperature. Within this framework and in the self-consistent Born approximation, we perform systematic calculations of the average double occupancy, the electronic density of states, the spectral function and the optical conductivity. Qualitatively, our method reproduces the lower and upper Hubbard bands, the spectral-weight transfer into a coherent quasiparticle band at their lower edges and the renormalisation of the Mott gap, which is associated with holon-doublon binding, due to the interactions of both quasiparticle species with the magnons. The zeros of the Green function at the chemical potential give the Luttinger volume, the poles of the self-energy reflect the underlying quasiparticle dispersion with a spin-renormalised hopping parameter and the optical gap is directly related to the Mott gap. Quantitatively, the square-lattice Hubbard model is one of the best-characterised problems in correlated condensed matter and many numerical calculations, all with different strengths and weaknesses, exist with which to benchmark our approach. From the semi-quantitative accuracy of our results for all but the weakest interaction strengths, we conclude that a self-consistent treatment of the spin-fluctuation effects on the charge degrees of freedom captures all the essential physics of the antiferromagnetic Mott-Hubbard insulator. We remark in addition that an analytical approximation with these properties serves a vital function in developing a full understanding of the fundamental physics of the Mott state, both in the antiferromagnetic insulator and at finite temperatures and dopings.
Field-induced spin density wave and spiral phases in a layered antiferromagnet
Stone, Matthew B.; Lumsden, Mark D.; Garlea, Vasile O.; ...
2015-07-28
Here we determine the low-field ordered magnetic phases of the S=1 dimerized antiferromagnet Ba 3Mn 2O 8 using single crystal neutron diffraction. We find that for magnetic fields between μ 0H=8.80 T and 10.56 T applied along themore » $$1\\bar{1}0$$ direction the system exhibits spin density wave order with incommensurate wave vectors of type (η,η,ε). For μ 0H > 10.56 T, the magnetic order changes to a spiral phase with incommensurate wave vectors only along the [hh0] direction. For both field induced ordered phases, the magnetic moments are lying in the plane perpendicular to the field direction. Finally, the nature of these two transitions is fundamentally different: the low-field transition is a second order transition to a spin-density wave ground state, while the one at higher field, toward the spiral phase, is of first order.« less
NMR studies of the helical antiferromagnetic compound EuCo 2P 2
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Higa, N.; Ding, Q. -P.; Johnston, D. C.
In EuCo 2P 2, 4 f electron spins of Eu 2+ ions order antiferromagnetically below a Neel temperature T N = 66.5K. The magnetic structure below T N was reported to be helical with the helix axis along the c-axis from the neutron diffraction study. We report the results of 153Eu, 59Co and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on EuCo 2P 2 using a single crystal and a powdered sample. In the antiferromagnetic (AFM) state, we succeeded in observing 153Eu, 59Co and 31P NMR spectra in zero magnetic field. The sharp 153Eu zero field NMR (ZF NMR) lines indicatemore » homogeneous Eu ordered moment. The 59Co and 31P ZF NMR spectra showed an asymmetric spectral shape, indicating a distribution of the internal magnetic induction at each nuclear position. The AFM propagation vector k characterizing the helical AFM state can be determined from the internal magnetic induction at Co site. In conclusion, we have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k distributed from (0, 0, 0.86)2π/c to (0, 0, 0.73)2π/c, where c is the lattice parameter.« less
NMR studies of the helical antiferromagnetic compound EuCo 2P 2
Higa, N.; Ding, Q. -P.; Johnston, D. C.; ...
2017-09-18
In EuCo 2P 2, 4 f electron spins of Eu 2+ ions order antiferromagnetically below a Neel temperature T N = 66.5K. The magnetic structure below T N was reported to be helical with the helix axis along the c-axis from the neutron diffraction study. We report the results of 153Eu, 59Co and 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements on EuCo 2P 2 using a single crystal and a powdered sample. In the antiferromagnetic (AFM) state, we succeeded in observing 153Eu, 59Co and 31P NMR spectra in zero magnetic field. The sharp 153Eu zero field NMR (ZF NMR) lines indicatemore » homogeneous Eu ordered moment. The 59Co and 31P ZF NMR spectra showed an asymmetric spectral shape, indicating a distribution of the internal magnetic induction at each nuclear position. The AFM propagation vector k characterizing the helical AFM state can be determined from the internal magnetic induction at Co site. In conclusion, we have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k distributed from (0, 0, 0.86)2π/c to (0, 0, 0.73)2π/c, where c is the lattice parameter.« less
Piezo-antiferromagnetic effect of sawtooth-like graphene nanoribbons
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zhao, Shangqian; Lu, Yan; Zhang, Yuchun
2014-05-19
A type of sawtooth-like graphene nanoribbon (SGNR) with piezo-antiferromagnetic effect is studied numerically. The ground state of the studied SGNR changes from nonmagnetic state to antiferromagnetic state with uniaxial strain. The changes of the spin-charge distributions during the stretching are investigated. The Hubbard model reveals that the hopping integrals between the π-orbitals of the carbon atoms are responsible to the piezo-antiferromagnetic effect. The study sheds light on the application of graphene-based structures to nanosensors and spintronic devices.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Atalay, Bora; Berker, A. Nihat
2018-05-01
Discrete-spin systems with maximally random nearest-neighbor interactions that can be symmetric or asymmetric, ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic, including off-diagonal disorder, are studied, for the number of states q =3 ,4 in d dimensions. We use renormalization-group theory that is exact for hierarchical lattices and approximate (Migdal-Kadanoff) for hypercubic lattices. For all d >1 and all noninfinite temperatures, the system eventually renormalizes to a random single state, thus signaling q ×q degenerate ordering. Note that this is the maximally degenerate ordering. For high-temperature initial conditions, the system crosses over to this highly degenerate ordering only after spending many renormalization-group iterations near the disordered (infinite-temperature) fixed point. Thus, a temperature range of short-range disorder in the presence of long-range order is identified, as previously seen in underfrustrated Ising spin-glass systems. The entropy is calculated for all temperatures, behaves similarly for ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions, and shows a derivative maximum at the short-range disordering temperature. With a sharp immediate contrast of infinitesimally higher dimension 1 +ɛ , the system is as expected disordered at all temperatures for d =1 .
Charge Order in (TMTTF)2TaF6 by Infrared Spectroscopy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oka, Yuki; Matsunaga, Noriaki; Nomura, Kazushige; Kawamoto, Atsuhi; Yamamoto, Kaoru; Yakushi, Kyuya
2015-11-01
We have performed infrared spectroscopy in (TMTTF)2TaF6 (TMTTF: tetramethyltetrathiafulvalene) to investigate the relationship between the charge order (CO) state and the antiferromagnetic (AF) insulating ground state. A clear peak splitting corresponding to the charge disproportionation was observed below the CO transition temperature. We estimated the degree of charge disproportionation, Δρ = ρrich - ρpoor, as 0.28e from the peak splitting and found that the CO state coexists with the AF state and there is no charge redistribution below the AF transition.
Topological antiferromagnetic spintronics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Šmejkal, Libor; Mokrousov, Yuriy; Yan, Binghai; MacDonald, Allan H.
2018-03-01
The recent demonstrations of electrical manipulation and detection of antiferromagnetic spins have opened up a new chapter in the story of spintronics. Here, we review the emerging research field that is exploring the links between antiferromagnetic spintronics and topological structures in real and momentum space. Active topics include proposals to realize Majorana fermions in antiferromagnetic topological superconductors, to control topological protection and Dirac points by manipulating antiferromagnetic order parameters, and to exploit the anomalous and topological Hall effects of zero-net-moment antiferromagnets. We explain the basic concepts behind these proposals, and discuss potential applications of topological antiferromagnetic spintronics.
Quantum criticality among entangled spin chains
Blanc, N.; Trinh, J.; Dong, L.; ...
2017-12-11
Here, an important challenge in magnetism is the unambiguous identification of a quantum spin liquid, of potential importance for quantum computing. In such a material, the magnetic spins should be fluctuating in the quantum regime, instead of frozen in a classical long-range-ordered state. While this requirement dictates systems wherein classical order is suppressed by a frustrating lattice, an ideal system would allow tuning of quantum fluctuations by an external parameter. Conventional three-dimensional antiferromagnets can be tuned through a quantum critical point—a region of highly fluctuating spins—by an applied magnetic field. Such systems suffer from a weak specific-heat peak at themore » quantum critical point, with little entropy available for quantum fluctuations. Here we study a different type of antiferromagnet, comprised of weakly coupled antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 chains as realized in the molecular salt K 2PbCu(NO 2) 6. Across the temperature–magnetic field boundary between three-dimensional order and the paramagnetic phase, the specific heat exhibits a large peak whose magnitude approaches a value suggestive of the spinon Sommerfeld coefficient of isolated quantum spin chains. These results demonstrate an alternative approach for producing quantum matter via a magnetic-field-induced shift of entropy from one-dimensional short-range order to a three-dimensional quantum critical point.« less
Quantum criticality among entangled spin chains
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Blanc, N.; Trinh, J.; Dong, L.
Here, an important challenge in magnetism is the unambiguous identification of a quantum spin liquid, of potential importance for quantum computing. In such a material, the magnetic spins should be fluctuating in the quantum regime, instead of frozen in a classical long-range-ordered state. While this requirement dictates systems wherein classical order is suppressed by a frustrating lattice, an ideal system would allow tuning of quantum fluctuations by an external parameter. Conventional three-dimensional antiferromagnets can be tuned through a quantum critical point—a region of highly fluctuating spins—by an applied magnetic field. Such systems suffer from a weak specific-heat peak at themore » quantum critical point, with little entropy available for quantum fluctuations. Here we study a different type of antiferromagnet, comprised of weakly coupled antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 chains as realized in the molecular salt K 2PbCu(NO 2) 6. Across the temperature–magnetic field boundary between three-dimensional order and the paramagnetic phase, the specific heat exhibits a large peak whose magnitude approaches a value suggestive of the spinon Sommerfeld coefficient of isolated quantum spin chains. These results demonstrate an alternative approach for producing quantum matter via a magnetic-field-induced shift of entropy from one-dimensional short-range order to a three-dimensional quantum critical point.« less
Quantum criticality among entangled spin chains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Blanc, N.; Trinh, J.; Dong, L.; Bai, X.; Aczel, A. A.; Mourigal, M.; Balents, L.; Siegrist, T.; Ramirez, A. P.
2018-03-01
An important challenge in magnetism is the unambiguous identification of a quantum spin liquid1,2, of potential importance for quantum computing. In such a material, the magnetic spins should be fluctuating in the quantum regime, instead of frozen in a classical long-range-ordered state. While this requirement dictates systems3,4 wherein classical order is suppressed by a frustrating lattice5, an ideal system would allow tuning of quantum fluctuations by an external parameter. Conventional three-dimensional antiferromagnets can be tuned through a quantum critical point—a region of highly fluctuating spins—by an applied magnetic field. Such systems suffer from a weak specific-heat peak at the quantum critical point, with little entropy available for quantum fluctuations6. Here we study a different type of antiferromagnet, comprised of weakly coupled antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 chains as realized in the molecular salt K2PbCu(NO2)6. Across the temperature-magnetic field boundary between three-dimensional order and the paramagnetic phase, the specific heat exhibits a large peak whose magnitude approaches a value suggestive of the spinon Sommerfeld coefficient of isolated quantum spin chains. These results demonstrate an alternative approach for producing quantum matter via a magnetic-field-induced shift of entropy from one-dimensional short-range order to a three-dimensional quantum critical point.
Zhu, M.; Wang, Y.; Li, P. G.; ...
2017-05-19
We report the magnetic and electronic properties of the bilayer ruthenate Sr 3Ru 2O 7 upon Fe substitution for Ru. We find that Sr 3(Ru 1-xFe x) 2O 7 shows spin-glass-like phase below 4 K for x = 0.01 and commensurate E-type antiferromagnetically ordered insulating ground state characterized by the propagation vector q c = (0.25 0.25 0) for x ≥ 0.03, in contrast to the paramagnetic metallic state in the parent compound with strong spin fluctuations occurring at wave vectors q = (0.09 0 0) and (0.25 0 0). The observed antiferromagnetic ordering is quasitwo-dimensional with very short correlationmore » length along the c axis, a feature similar to the Mndoped Sr 3Ru 2O 7. Lastly, our results suggest that this ordered ground state is associated with the intrinsic magnetic instability in the pristine compound, which can be readily tipped by the local magnetic coupling between the 3d orbitals of the magnetic dopants and Ru 4d orbitals.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zhu, M.; Wang, Y.; Li, P. G.
We report the magnetic and electronic properties of the bilayer ruthenate Sr 3Ru 2O 7 upon Fe substitution for Ru. We find that Sr 3(Ru 1-xFe x) 2O 7 shows spin-glass-like phase below 4 K for x = 0.01 and commensurate E-type antiferromagnetically ordered insulating ground state characterized by the propagation vector q c = (0.25 0.25 0) for x ≥ 0.03, in contrast to the paramagnetic metallic state in the parent compound with strong spin fluctuations occurring at wave vectors q = (0.09 0 0) and (0.25 0 0). The observed antiferromagnetic ordering is quasitwo-dimensional with very short correlationmore » length along the c axis, a feature similar to the Mndoped Sr 3Ru 2O 7. Lastly, our results suggest that this ordered ground state is associated with the intrinsic magnetic instability in the pristine compound, which can be readily tipped by the local magnetic coupling between the 3d orbitals of the magnetic dopants and Ru 4d orbitals.« less
Ground-state ordering of the J1-J2 model on the simple cubic and body-centered cubic lattices
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Farnell, D. J. J.; Götze, O.; Richter, J.
2016-06-01
The J1-J2 Heisenberg model is a "canonical" model in the field of quantum magnetism in order to study the interplay between frustration and quantum fluctuations as well as quantum phase transitions driven by frustration. Here we apply the coupled cluster method (CCM) to study the spin-half J1-J2 model with antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbor bonds J1>0 and next-nearest-neighbor bonds J2>0 for the simple cubic (sc) and body-centered cubic (bcc) lattices. In particular, we wish to study the ground-state ordering of these systems as a function of the frustration parameter p =z2J2/z1J1 , where z1 (z2) is the number of nearest (next-nearest) neighbors. We wish to determine the positions of the phase transitions using the CCM and we aim to resolve the nature of the phase transition points. We consider the ground-state energy, order parameters, spin-spin correlation functions, as well as the spin stiffness in order to determine the ground-state phase diagrams of these models. We find a direct first-order phase transition at a value of p =0.528 from a state of nearest-neighbor Néel order to next-nearest-neighbor Néel order for the bcc lattice. For the sc lattice the situation is more subtle. CCM results for the energy, the order parameter, the spin-spin correlation functions, and the spin stiffness indicate that there is no direct first-order transition between ground-state phases with magnetic long-range order, rather it is more likely that two phases with antiferromagnetic long range are separated by a narrow region of a spin-liquid-like quantum phase around p =0.55 . Thus the strong frustration present in the J1-J2 Heisenberg model on the sc lattice may open a window for an unconventional quantum ground state in this three-dimensional spin model.
Electronic transition in La1-xSrxTiO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hays, C. C.; Zhou, J.-S.; Markert, J. T.; Goodenough, J. B.
1999-10-01
The transition with increasing x in La1-xSrxTiO3 from an antiferromagnetic, p-type polaronic conductor to an n-type metal with an enhanced Pauli paramagnetism was investigated by monitoring changes in structure, magnetic properties, and, under different hydrostatic pressures, the resistance and thermoelectric power of ceramic samples. We conclude that LaTiO3 is an itinerant-electron antiferromagnet and the transition is first order with a phase separation associated with cooperative oxygen-atom displacements that segregate strongly correlated states from Fermi-liquid states. The Néel temperature TN~145 K decreases precipitously to 100 K at the phase limit x=0.045+/-0.005 the two-phase domain extends over the compositions 0.045<=x<=0.08.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jia, Xingtao; Tang, Huimin; Wang, Shizhuo; Qin, Minghui
2017-02-01
We predict large magnetoresistance (MR) and spin transfer torque (STT) in antiferromagnetic Fe |MgO |FeMn |Cu tunnel junctions based on first-principles scattering theory. MR as large as ˜100 % is found in one junction. Magnetic dynamic simulations show that STT acting on the antiferromagnetic order parameter dominates the spin dynamics, and an electronic bias of order 10-1mV and current density of order 105Acm-2 can switches a junction of three-layer MgO, they are about one order smaller than that in Fe |MgO |Fe junction with the same barrier thickness, respectively. The multiple scattering in the antiferromagnetic region is considered to be responsible for the enhanced spin torque and smaller switching current density.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Talantsev, A.; Lu, Y.; Fache, T.; Lavanant, M.; Hamadeh, A.; Aristov, A.; Koplak, O.; Morgunov, R.; Mangin, S.
2018-04-01
Two synthetic antiferromagnet bilayer systems with strong perpendicular anisotropy CoFeB/Ta/CoFeB and Pt/Co/Ir/Co/Pt have been grown using sputtering techniques. For both systems two types of magnetization transitions have been studied. The first one concerns transitions from a state where magnetizations of the two magnetic layers are parallel (P state) to a state where magnetizations of the two layers are aligned antiparallel (AP state). The second one concerns transitions between the two possible antiparallel alignments (AP+ to AP-). For both systems and both transitions after-effect measurements can be understood in the frame of nucleation—propagation model. Time derivative analysis of magnetic relaxation curves and mapping of the first order reversal curves at different temperature allowed us to demonstrate the presence of different pinning centers, which number can be controlled by magnetic field and temperature.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Guo, Feng; Zhang, Na; Jin, Wei; Chang, Jun
2017-06-01
We theoretically study the dynamic time evolution following laser pulse pumping in an antiferromagnetic insulator Cr2O3. From the photoexcited high-spin quartet states to the long-lived low-spin doublet states, the ultrafast demagnetization processes are investigated by solving the dissipative Schrödinger equation. We find that the demagnetization times are of the order of hundreds of femtoseconds, in good agreement with recent experiments. The switching times could be strongly reduced by properly tuning the energy gaps between the multiplet energy levels of Cr3+. Furthermore, the relaxation times also depend on the hybridization of atomic orbitals in the first photoexcited state. Our results suggest that the selective manipulation of the electronic structure by engineering stress-strain or chemical substitution allows effective control of the magnetic state switching in photoexcited insulating transition-metal oxides.
Exact Critical Exponents for the Antiferromagnetic Quantum Critical Metal in Two Dimensions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schlief, Andres; Lunts, Peter; Lee, Sung-Sik
2017-04-01
Unconventional metallic states which do not support well-defined single-particle excitations can arise near quantum phase transitions as strong quantum fluctuations of incipient order parameters prevent electrons from forming coherent quasiparticles. Although antiferromagnetic phase transitions occur commonly in correlated metals, understanding the nature of the strange metal realized at the critical point in layered systems has been hampered by a lack of reliable theoretical methods that take into account strong quantum fluctuations. We present a nonperturbative solution to the low-energy theory for the antiferromagnetic quantum critical metal in two spatial dimensions. Being a strongly coupled theory, it can still be solved reliably in the low-energy limit as quantum fluctuations are organized by a new control parameter that emerges dynamically. We predict the exact critical exponents that govern the universal scaling of physical observables at low temperatures.
Thickness dependent exchange bias in martensitic epitaxial Ni-Mn-Sn thin films
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Behler, Anna; Department of Physics, Institute for Solid State Physics, Dresden University of Technology, 01062 Dresden; Teichert, Niclas
2013-12-15
A thickness dependent exchange bias in the low temperature martensitic state of epitaxial Ni-Mn-Sn thin films is found. The effect can be retained down to very small thicknesses. For a Ni{sub 50}Mn{sub 32}Sn{sub 18} thin film, which does not undergo a martensitic transformation, no exchange bias is observed. Our results suggest that a significant interplay between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic regions, which is the origin for exchange bias, is only present in the martensite. The finding is supported by ab initio calculations showing that the antiferromagnetic order is stabilized in the phase.
High-temperature interlayer magnetoresistance in La5Mo4O16
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kobayashi, K.; Katsufuji, T.
2011-03-01
We found that La5Mo4O16 with Mo4+ and Mo5+ ions (S=1 and S=1/2 spins) on a quasisquare lattice exhibits a distinct magnetoresistance for the current perpendicular to the square-lattice layers below the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature TAF=190 K. This magnetoresistance occurs well below 1 T, and can be attributed to a metamagnetic transition from antiferromagnetically aligned moments between the layers to ferromagnetically aligned ones. The magnetoresistance changes its characteristic with the change of the magnetic state below TF=70 K, where spontaneous magnetization appears.
Novoselova, Iuliia P; Petruhins, Andrejs; Wiedwald, Ulf; Ingason, Árni Sigurdur; Hase, Thomas; Magnus, Fridrik; Kapaklis, Vassilios; Palisaitis, Justinas; Spasova, Marina; Farle, Michael; Rosen, Johanna; Salikhov, Ruslan
2018-02-08
In 2013, a new class of inherently nanolaminated magnetic materials, the so called magnetic MAX phases, was discovered. Following predictive material stability calculations, the hexagonal Mn 2 GaC compound was synthesized as hetero-epitaxial films containing Mn as the exclusive M-element. Recent theoretical and experimental studies suggested a high magnetic ordering temperature and non-collinear antiferromagnetic (AFM) spin states as a result of competitive ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic exchange interactions. In order to assess the potential for practical applications of Mn 2 GaC, we have studied the temperature-dependent magnetization, and the magnetoresistive, magnetostrictive as well as magnetocaloric properties of the compound. The material exhibits two magnetic phase transitions. The Néel temperature is T N ~ 507 K, at which the system changes from a collinear AFM state to the paramagnetic state. At T t = 214 K the material undergoes a first order magnetic phase transition from AFM at higher temperature to a non-collinear AFM spin structure. Both states show large uniaxial c-axis magnetostriction of 450 ppm. Remarkably, the magnetostriction changes sign, being compressive (negative) above T t and tensile (positive) below the T t . The sign change of the magnetostriction is accompanied by a sign change in the magnetoresistance indicating a coupling among the spin, lattice and electrical transport properties.
Antiferromagnetic Ordering in Organic Conductor λ-(BEDT-TTF)2GaCl4 Probed by 13C NMR
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Saito, Yohei; Fukuoka, Shuhei; Kobayashi, Takuya; Kawamoto, Atsushi; Mori, Hatsumi
2018-01-01
The ground state of λ-(BEDT-TTF)2GaCl4, which has the same structure as the organic superconductor λ-(BETS)2GaCl4, was investigated by magnetic susceptibility and 13C NMR measurements. The temperature dependence of the magnetic susceptibility revealed an antiferromagnetic (AF) correlation with J/kB ≃ 98 K. NMR spectrum splitting and the divergence of 1/T1 were observed at approximately 13 K, which is associated with the AF transition. We found that the AF structure is commensurate according to discrete NMR peak splitting, suggesting that the ground state of λ-(BEDT-TTF)2GaCl4 is an AF dimer-Mott insulating state. Our results suggest that the superconducting phase of λ-type salts would be located near the AF insulating phase.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Milyaev, M. A.; Naumova, L. I.; Chernyshova, T. A.; Proglyado, V. V.; Kulesh, N. A.; Patrakov, E. I.; Kamenskii, I. Yu.; Ustinov, V. V.
2016-12-01
Spin valves with a synthetic antiferromagnet have been prepared by magnetron sputtering. Regularities of the formation of single- and two-phase spin-flop states in the synthetic antiferromagnet have been studied using magnetoresistance measurements and imaging the magnetic structure. A thermomagnetic treatment of spin valve in a field that corresponds to the single-phase spin-flop state of synthetic antiferromagnet was shown to allow us to obtain a magnetically sensitive material characterized by hysteresis-free field dependence of the magnetoresistance.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Okamoto, Yoshihiko; Mori, Masaki; Katayama, Naoyuki; Miyake, Atsushi; Tokunaga, Masashi; Matsuo, Akira; Kindo, Koichi; Takenaka, Koshi
2018-03-01
We report a comprehensive study on the magnetic and structural properties of the spinel sulfides LiInCr4S8, LiGaCr4S8, and CuInCr4S8, where Li+/Cu+ and Ga3+/In3+ ions form a zinc-blende-type order. On the basis of synchrotron X-ray diffraction and magnetization data obtained using polycrystalline samples, these three sulfides are suggested to be breathing pyrochlore magnets with alternating antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic interactions on the small and large tetrahedra, respectively. The measured magnetization processes of the three sulfides up to 72 T are significantly different. The magnetization curves of LiInCr4S8 and CuInCr4S8 have large hysteresis loops with different shapes, while there is no hysteresis in that of LiGaCr4S8. Geometrical frustration of the small tetrahedron is likely to give rise to a wide variety of ground states, indicating the rich physics in these antiferromagnetic-ferromagnetic breathing pyrochlore magnets.
Interlayer coupling through a dimensionality-induced magnetic state
Gibert, M.; Viret, M.; Zubko, P.; Jaouen, N.; Tonnerre, J.-M.; Torres-Pardo, A.; Catalano, S.; Gloter, A.; Stéphan, O.; Triscone, J.-M.
2016-01-01
Dimensionality is known to play an important role in many compounds for which ultrathin layers can behave very differently from the bulk. This is especially true for the paramagnetic metal LaNiO3, which can become insulating and magnetic when only a few monolayers thick. We show here that an induced antiferromagnetic order can be stabilized in the [111] direction by interfacial coupling to the insulating ferromagnet LaMnO3, and used to generate interlayer magnetic coupling of a nature that depends on the exact number of LaNiO3 monolayers. For 7-monolayer-thick LaNiO3/LaMnO3 superlattices, negative and positive exchange bias, as well as antiferromagnetic interlayer coupling are observed in different temperature windows. All three behaviours are explained based on the emergence of a (¼,¼,¼)-wavevector antiferromagnetic structure in LaNiO3 and the presence of interface asymmetry with LaMnO3. This dimensionality-induced magnetic order can be used to tailor a broad range of magnetic properties in well-designed superlattice-based devices. PMID:27079668
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chatterjee, Shubhayu; Sachdev, Subir; Eberlein, Andreas
2017-08-01
We study thermal and electrical transport in metals and superconductors near a quantum phase transition where antiferromagnetic order disappears. The same theory can also be applied to quantum phase transitions involving the loss of certain classes of intrinsic topological order. For a clean superconductor, we recover and extend well-known universal results. The heat conductivity for commensurate and incommensurate antiferromagnetism coexisting with superconductivity shows a markedly different doping dependence near the quantum critical point, thus allowing us to distinguish between these states. In the dirty limit, the results for the conductivities are qualitatively similar for the metal and the superconductor. In this regime, the geometric properties of the Fermi surface allow for a very good phenomenological understanding of the numerical results on the conductivities. In the simplest model, we find that the conductivities do not track the doping evolution of the Hall coefficient, in contrast to recent experimental findings. We propose a doping dependent scattering rate, possibly due to quenched short-range charge fluctuations below optimal doping, to consistently describe both the Hall data and the longitudinal conductivities.
Zhang, Qiang; Fernandes, Rafael M.; Lamsal, Jagat; ...
2015-02-04
Inelastic neutron scattering is employed to investigate the impact of electronic nematic order on the magnetic spectra of LaFeAsO and Ba(Fe 0.953Co 0.047) 2As 2. These materials are ideal to study the paramagnetic-nematic state, since the nematic order, signaled by the tetragonal-to-orthorhombic transition at T S, sets in well above the stripe antiferromagnetic ordering at T N. We find that the temperature-dependent dynamic susceptibility displays an anomaly at T S followed by a sharp enhancement in the spin-spin correlation length, revealing a strong feedback effect of nematic order on the low-energy magnetic spectrum. As a result, our findings can bemore » consistently described by a model that attributes the structural or nematic transition to magnetic fluctuations, and unveils the key role played by nematic order in promoting the long-range stripe antiferromagnetic order in iron pnictides.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zhang, Qiang; Fernandes, Rafael M.; Lamsal, Jagat
Inelastic neutron scattering is employed to investigate the impact of electronic nematic order on the magnetic spectra of LaFeAsO and Ba(Fe 0.953Co 0.047) 2As 2. These materials are ideal to study the paramagnetic-nematic state, since the nematic order, signaled by the tetragonal-to-orthorhombic transition at T S, sets in well above the stripe antiferromagnetic ordering at T N. We find that the temperature-dependent dynamic susceptibility displays an anomaly at T S followed by a sharp enhancement in the spin-spin correlation length, revealing a strong feedback effect of nematic order on the low-energy magnetic spectrum. As a result, our findings can bemore » consistently described by a model that attributes the structural or nematic transition to magnetic fluctuations, and unveils the key role played by nematic order in promoting the long-range stripe antiferromagnetic order in iron pnictides.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Diop, L. V. B.; Isnard, O.
2018-01-01
The effects of cerium substitution on the structural and magnetic properties of the L a1 -xC exF e12B6 (0 ≤x ≤0.175 ) series of compounds have been studied. All of the compounds exhibit an antiferromagnetic ground state below the Néel temperature TN≈36 K . Both antiferromagnetic and paramagnetic states can be transformed into the ferromagnetic state irreversibly and reversibly depending on the magnitude of the applied magnetic field, the temperature, and the direction of their changes. Of particular interest is the low-temperature magnetization process. This process is discontinuous and evolves unexpected huge metamagnetic transitions consisting of a succession of sharp magnetization steps separated by plateaus, giving rise to an unusual avalanchelike behavior. At constant temperature and magnetic field, the evolution with time of the magnetization displays a spectacular spontaneous jump after a long incubation time. L a1 -xC exF e12B6 compounds exhibit a unique combination of exceptional features like large thermal hysteresis, giant magnetization jumps, and remarkably huge magnetic hysteresis for the field-induced first-order metamagnetic transition.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Garcia-Adeva, Angel J.; Huber, David L.
2001-07-01
In this work we generalize and subsequently apply the effective-field renormalization-group (EFRG) technique to the problem of ferro- and antiferromagnetically coupled Ising spins with local anisotropy axes in geometrically frustrated geometries (kagomé and pyrochlore lattices). In this framework, we calculate the various ground states of these systems and the corresponding critical points. Excellent agreement is found with exact and Monte Carlo results. The effects of frustration are discussed. As pointed out by other authors, it turns out that the spin-ice model can be exactly mapped to the standard Ising model, but with effective interactions of the opposite sign to those in the original Hamiltonian. Therefore, the ferromagnetic spin ice is frustrated and does not order. Antiferromagnetic spin ice (in both two and three dimensions) is found to undergo a transition to a long-range-ordered state. The thermal and magnetic critical exponents for this transition are calculated. It is found that the thermal exponent is that of the Ising universality class, whereas the magnetic critical exponent is different, as expected from the fact that the Zeeman term has a different symmetry in these systems. In addition, the recently introduced generalized constant coupling method is also applied to the calculation of the critical points and ground-state configurations. Again, a very good agreement is found with exact, Monte Carlo, and renormalization-group calculations for the critical points. Incidentally, we show that the generalized constant coupling approach can be regarded as the lowest-order limit of the EFRG technique, in which correlations outside a frustrated unit are neglected, and scaling is substituted by strict equality of the thermodynamic quantities.
Role of band filling in tuning the high-field phases of URu 2 Si 2
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wartenbe, M. R.; Chen, K. -W.; Gallagher, A.
2017-08-28
We present a detailed study of the low temperature and high magnetic eld phases in the chemical substitution series URu 2Si 2-xPx using electrical transport and magnetization in pulsed magnetic elds up to 65T. Within the hidden order x-regime (0 < x ≲ 0.035) the eld induced ordering that was earlier seen for x = 0 is robust, even as the hidden order temperature is suppressed. Earlier work shows that for 0.035 ≲ x ≲ 0.26 there is a Kondo lattice with a no-ordered state that is replaced by antiferromagnetism for 0.26 ≲ x ≲ 0.5. We observe a simplimore » ed continuation of the eld induced order in the no-order x-regime and an enhancement of the field induced order upon the destruction of the antiferromagnetism with magnetic field. These results closely resemble what is seen for URu 2-xRhxSi 2 a, from which we infer that charge tuning dominantly controls the ground state of URu 2Si 2, regardless of whether s/p or d-electrons are replaced. Contraction of the unit cell volume may also play a role at large x. This provides guidance for determining the specific factors that lead to hidden order versus magnetism in this family of materials and constrains possible models for hidden order.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Goltz, Til; Zinth, Veronika; Johrendt, Dirk; Rosner, Helge; Pascua, Gwendolyne; Luetkens, Hubertus; Materne, Philipp; Klauss, Hans-Henning
2014-04-01
We present a detailed investigation of the electronic phase diagram of effectively charge compensated Ba1-xKx(Fe1-yCoy)2As2 with x /2≈y. Our experimental study by means of x-ray diffraction, Mössbauer spectroscopy, muon spin relaxation and ac-susceptibility measurements on polycrystalline samples is complemented by density functional electronic structure calculations. For low substitution levels of x /2≈y≤0.13, the system displays an orthorhombically distorted and antiferromagnetically ordered ground state. The low-temperature structural and magnetic order parameters are successively reduced with increasing substitution level. We observe a linear relationship between the structural and the magnetic order parameter as a function of temperature and substitution level for x /2≈y≤0.13. At intermediate substitution levels in the range between 0.13 and 0.19, we find superconductivity with a maximum Tc of 15 K coexisting with static magnetic order on a microscopic length scale. For higher substitution levels x /2≈y≥0.25, a tetragonal nonmagnetic ground state is observed. Our DFT calculations yield a significant reduction of the Fe 3d density of states at the Fermi energy and a strong suppression of the ordered magnetic moment in excellent agreement with experimental results. The appearance of superconductivity within the antiferromagnetic state can by explained by the introduction of disorder due to nonmagnetic impurities to a system with a constant charge carrier density.
Producing coherent excitations in pumped Mott antiferromagnetic insulators
Wang, Yao; Claassen, Martin; Moritz, B.; ...
2017-12-15
Nonequilibrium dynamics in correlated materials has attracted attention due to the possibility of characterizing, tuning, and creating complex ordered states. To understand the photoinduced microscopic dynamics, especially the linkage under realistic pump conditions between transient states and remnant elementary excitations, we performed nonperturbative simulations of various time-resolved spectroscopies. We used the Mott antiferromagnetic insulator as a model platform. The transient dynamics of multi-particle excitations can be attributed to the interplay between Floquet virtual states and a modification of the density of states, in which interactions induce a spectral weight transfer. Using an autocorrelation of the time-dependent spectral function, we showmore » that resonance of the virtual states with the upper Hubbard band in the Mott insulator provides the route towards manipulating the electronic distribution and modifying charge and spin excitations. In conclusion, our results link transient dynamics to the nature of many-body excitations and provide an opportunity to design nonequilibrium states of matter via tuned laser pulses.« less
Single Spin Superconductivity: Bulk and Junction Effects
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rudd, Robert E.; Pickett, Warren E.
1998-03-01
The Josephson Effect provides a primary signature of single spin superconductivity (SSS), the as yet unobserved superconducting state which was proposed recently(W.E. Pickett, Phys. Rev. Lett. 77), 3185 (1996). as a low temperature phase of half-metallic antiferromagnets.(W.E. Pickett, ``Spin Density Functional Based Search for Half-Metallic Antiferromagnets,'' cond-mat/9709100 (1997).) These materials are insulating in the spin-down channel but are metallic in the spin-up channel. The SSS state is characterized by a unique form of p-wave pairing within a single spin channel.(R.E. Rudd and W.E. Pickett, ``Single Spin Superconductivity:Formulation and Ginzburg-Landau Theory,'' Phys. Rev. B. in press) We develop the theory of a rich variety of Josephson effects that arise due to the form of the SSS order parameter. Tunneling is allowed at a SSS-SSS^' junction depending on the relative orientation of each of their order parameters (SSS and HM AFM). No current flows between an SSS and an s-wave BCS system, which provides a powerful method to distinguish SSS from other superconducting states.
Dissipative preparation of antiferromagnetic order in the Fermi-Hubbard model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kaczmarczyk, J.; Weimer, H.; Lemeshko, M.
2016-09-01
The Fermi-Hubbard model is one of the key models of condensed matter physics, which holds a potential for explaining the mystery of high-temperature superconductivity. Recent progress in ultracold atoms in optical lattices has paved the way to studying the model’s phase diagram using the tools of quantum simulation, which emerged as a promising alternative to the numerical calculations plagued by the infamous sign problem. However, the temperatures achieved using elaborate laser cooling protocols so far have been too high to show the appearance of antiferromagnetic (AF) and superconducting quantum phases directly. In this work, we demonstrate that using the machinery of dissipative quantum state engineering, one can observe the emergence of the AF order in the Fermi-Hubbard model with fermions in optical lattices. The core of the approach is to add incoherent laser scattering in such a way that the AF state emerges as the dark state of the driven-dissipative dynamics. The proposed controlled dissipation channels described in this work are straightforward to add to already existing experimental setups.
Benali, Anouar; Shulenburger, Luke; Krogel, Jaron T.; ...
2016-06-07
The Magneli phase Ti 4O 7 is an important transition metal oxide with a wide range of applications because of its interplay between charge, spin, and lattice degrees of freedom. At low temperatures, it has non-trivial magnetic states very close in energy, driven by electronic exchange and correlation interactions. We have examined three low- lying states, one ferromagnetic and two antiferromagnetic, and calculated their energies as well as Ti spin moment distributions using highly accurate Quantum Monte Carlo methods. We compare our results to those obtained from density functional theory- based methods that include approximate corrections for exchange and correlation.more » Our results confirm the nature of the states and their ordering in energy, as compared with density-functional theory methods. However, the energy differences and spin distributions differ. Here, a detailed analysis suggests that non-local exchange-correlation functionals, in addition to other approximations such as LDA+U to account for correlations, are needed to simultaneously obtain better estimates for spin moments, distributions, energy differences and energy gaps.« less
Systematic approaches to layered materials with strong electron correlations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chung, Chung-Hou
I present systematic large-N approaches to study the ground state magnetic orderings and charge transport of layered materials with strong electron correlations, including the organic material kappa-(BEDT-TTF)2X, and the antiferromagnetic insulators Cs2CuCl4 and SrCu2(BO3) 2. I model the electronic properties of the organic materials kappa-(BEDT-TTF) 2X with a fermionic SU(N) Hubbard-Heisenberg model on an anisotropic triangular lattice. The ground state phase diagram shows a metal-insulator transition and a depression of the density of states in the metallic phase which are consistent with the experiments. The magnetic properties of kappa-(BEDT-TTF) 2X are modeled by a bosonic Sp(N) quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the same lattice. The phase diagram consists of five different phases as a function of the size of the spin and the degree of frustration: the Neel ordered phase, a (pi, pi) short-range-order (SRO) phase, an incommensurate (q, q) long-range-order (LRO) phase, a (q, q) SRO phase, and a decoupled chain phase. I apply the same Sp(N) approach on the same triangular lattice to model the magnetic properties of Cs2CuCl 4 both with and without a magnetic field. At zero field, I find the ground state either exhibits incommensurate spin order, or is in a quantum disordered phase with deconfined spin-1/2 excitations and topological order. The Sp(N) calculation of spin excitation spectrum shows a large upward quantum renormalization consistent with that seen in experiments. For fields perpendicular to the plane of spin rotation, I find that the spins form an incommensurate "cone" of polarization up to a saturation field where all spins are fully polarized. There is a large quantum renormalization of the zero-field incommensuration. The results are in apparent agreement with neutron scattering experiments. Finally, the magnetic properties of the insulator SrCu2(BO 3)2 is modeled by the Sp(N) quantum antiferromagnet on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice. In addition to the familiar Neel and dimer phases, I find a confining phase with plaquette order, and a topologically ordered phase with deconfined S = 1/2 spinons and helical spin correlations. The deconfined phase is contiguous to the dimer phase, and in a regime of couplings close to those appropriate for the material.
Spin transfer torque in antiferromagnetic spin valves: From clean to disordered regimes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Saidaoui, Hamed Ben Mohamed; Manchon, Aurelien; Waintal, Xavier
2014-05-01
Current-driven spin torques in metallic spin valves composed of antiferromagnets are theoretically studied using the nonequilibrium Green's function method implemented on a tight-binding model. We focus our attention on G-type and L-type antiferromagnets in both clean and disordered regimes. In such structures, spin torques can either rotate the magnetic order parameter coherently (coherent torque) or compete with the internal antiferromagnetic exchange (exchange torque). We show that, depending on the symmetry of the spin valve, the coherent and exchange torques can either be in the plane, ∝n×(q×n) or out of the plane ∝n×q, where q and n are the directions of the order parameter of the polarizer and the free antiferromagnetic layers, respectively. Although disorder conserves the symmetry of the torques, it strongly reduces the torque magnitude, pointing out the need for momentum conservation to ensure strong spin torque in antiferromagnetic spin valves.
The novel metallic states of the cuprates: Topological Fermi liquids and strange metals
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sachdev, Subir; Chowdhury, Debanjan
2016-12-01
We review ideas on the nature of the metallic states of the hole-doped cuprate high temperature superconductors, with an emphasis on the connections between the Luttinger theorem for the size of the Fermi surface, topological quantum field theories (TQFTs), and critical theories involving changes in the size of the Fermi surface. We begin with the derivation of the Luttinger theorem for a Fermi liquid, using momentum balance during a process of flux insertion in a lattice electronic model with toroidal boundary conditions. We then review the TQFT of the ℤ spin liquid, and demonstrate its compatibility with the toroidal momentum balance argument. This discussion leads naturally to a simple construction of "topological" Fermi liquid states: the fractionalized Fermi liquid (FL*) and the algebraic charge liquid (ACL). We present arguments for a description of the pseudogap metal of the cuprates using ℤ-FL* or ℤ-ACL states with Ising-nematic order. These pseudogap metal states are also described as Higgs phases of a SU(2) gauge theory. The Higgs field represents local antiferromagnetism, but the Higgs-condensed phase does not have long-range antiferromagnetic order: the magnitude of the Higgs field determines the pseudogap, the reconstruction of the Fermi surface, and the Ising-nematic order. Finally, we discuss the route to the large Fermi surface Fermi liquid via the critical point where the Higgs condensate and Ising nematic order vanish, and the application of Higgs criticality to the strange metal.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Reschke, S.; Wang, Zhe; Mayr, F.; Ruff, E.; Lunkenheimer, P.; Tsurkan, V.; Loidl, A.
2017-10-01
We report on THz time-domain spectroscopy on multiferroic GeV4S8 , which undergoes orbital ordering at a Jahn-Teller transition at 30.5 K and exhibits antiferromagnetic order below 14.6 K. The THz experiments are complemented by dielectric experiments at audio and radio frequencies. We identify a low-lying excitation close to 0.5 THz, which is only weakly temperature dependent and probably corresponds to a molecular excitation within the electronic level scheme of the V4 clusters. In addition, we detect complex temperature-dependent behavior of a low-lying phononic excitation, closely linked to the onset of orbitally driven ferroelectricity. In the high-temperature cubic phase, which is paramagnetic and orbitally disordered, this excitation is of relaxational character becomes an overdamped Lorentzian mode in the orbitally ordered phase below the Jahn-Teller transition, and finally appears as well-defined phonon excitation in the antiferromagnetic state. Abrupt changes in the real and imaginary parts of the complex dielectric permittivity show that orbital ordering appears via a structural phase transition with strong first-order character and that the onset of antiferromagnetic order is accompanied by significant structural changes, which are of first-order character, too. Dielectric spectroscopy documents that at low frequencies, significant dipolar relaxations are present in the orbitally ordered, paramagnetic phase only. In contrast to the closely related GaV4S8 , this relaxation dynamics that most likely mirrors coupled orbital and polar fluctuations does not seem to be related to the dynamic processes detected in the THz regime.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yao, Jian-Guo; Peng, Guang-Xiong
2004-11-01
The electronic structure and the magnetic properties of the non-pure organic ferromagnetic compound MnCu(pbaOH)(H2O)3 with pbaOH = 2-hydroxy-1, 3-propylenebis (oxamato) are studied by using the density-functional theory with local-spin-density approximation. The density of states, total energy, and the spin magnetic moment are calculated. The calculations reveal that the compound MnCu(pbaOH)(H20)3 has a stable metal-ferromagnetic ground state, and the spin magnetic moment per molecule is 2.208 μB, and the spin magnetic moment is mainly from Mn ion and Cu ion. An antiferromagnetic order is expected and the antiferromagnetic exchange interaction of d-electrons of Cu and Mn passes through the antiferromagnetic interaction between the adjacent C, O, and N atoms along the path linking the atoms Cu and Mn. The project supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant No. 10375074 and Hubei Automotive Industries Institute Foundation under Grant No. QY2002-16
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shimizu, Yasunobu; Matsumoto, Yuji; Aoki, Kosuke; Kimura, Noriaki; Aoki, Haruyoshi
2012-04-01
We have performed an extensive study on the electronic transport properties of CexLa1-xRu2Si2. At zero field or under the fields parallel to the hard axis of magnetization, the residual resistivity, magnetoresistivity and Hall resistivity are found to be most enhanced around x = 0.85 in the antiferromagnetic state. On the other hand, the high magnetic field along the easy axis is effective to suppress the enhancement. The coherence temperature derived from the temperature variation of Hall coefficient becomes equal to the antiferromagnetic transition temperature at x = 0.85, indicating that the competition between the coherence of the Kondo singlet and the long range magnetic order is responsible for the enhancement. The competition is likely to affect also the magnetic properties in the antiferromagnetic state. The comparison with the de Haas--van Alphen effect measurements suggests that the enhancement is likely to be due to the increase in scattering. The present results are compared with the theory by Hattori and Miyake.
Magnetic order and electronic structure of 5d 3 double perovskite Sr 2ScOsO 6
Taylor, A. E.; Morrow, R.; Singh, D. J.; ...
2015-03-01
The magnetic susceptibility, crystal and magnetic structures, and electronic structure of double perovskite Sr 2ScOsO 6 are reported. Using both neutron and x-ray powder diffraction we find that the crystal structure is monoclinic P21/n from 3.5 to 300 K. Magnetization measurements indicate an antiferromagnetic transition at TN=92 K, one of the highest transition temperatures of any double perovskite hosting only one magnetic ion. Type I antiferromagnetic order is determined by neutron powder diffraction, with an Os moment of only 1.6(1) muB, close to half the spin-only value for a crystal field split 5d electron state with t2g^3 ground state. Densitymore » functional calculations show that this reduction is largely the result of strong Os-O hybridization, with spin-orbit coupling responsible for only a ~0.1 muB reduction in the moment.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yamaguchi, Hironori; Tamekuni, Yusuke; Iwasaki, Yoshiki; Otsuka, Rei; Hosokoshi, Yuko; Kida, Takanori; Hagiwara, Masayuki
2017-06-01
We successfully synthesize single crystals of the verdazyl radical α -2 ,3 ,5 -Cl3 -V. Ab initio molecular orbital calculations indicate that the two dominant antiferromagnetic interactions, J1 and J2 (α =J2/J1≃0.56 ), form an S =1 /2 distorted square lattice. We explain the magnetic properties based on the S =1 /2 square lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet using the quantum Monte Carlo method, and examine the effects of the lattice distortion and the interplane interaction contribution. In the low-temperature regions below 6.4 K, we observe anisotropic magnetic behavior accompanied by a phase transition to a magnetically ordered state. The electron spin resonance signals exhibit anisotropic behavior in the temperature dependence of the resonance field and the linewidth. We explain the frequency dependence of the resonance fields in the ordered phase using a mean-field approximation with out-of-plane easy-axis anisotropy, which causes a spin-flop phase transition at approximately 0.4 T for the field perpendicular to the plane. Furthermore, the anisotropic dipole field provides supporting information regarding the presence of the easy-axis anisotropy. These results demonstrate that the lattice distortion, anisotropy, and interplane interaction of this model are sufficiently small that they do not affect the intrinsic behavior of the S =1 /2 square lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet.
238U Mössbauer study on the magnetic properties of uranium-based heavy fermion superconductors
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tsutsui, Satoshi; Nakada, Masami; Nasu, Saburo; Haga, Yoshinori; Honma, Tetsuo; Yamamoto, Etsuji; Ohkuni, Hitoshi; Ōnuki, Yoshichika
2000-07-01
We have performed 238U Mössbauer spectroscopy of uranium-based heavy fermion superconductors, UPd2Al3 and URu2Si2, in order to investigate their physical properties, mainly their magnetic properties. The slow relaxation of magnetic hyperfine interaction in a paramagnetic state and the static hyperfine field has been observed in an antiferromagnetic ordered state for each compound. The line-widths have maximum at their characteristic temperatures where their magnetic susceptibilities have maximum values.
Disentangling superconducting and magnetic orders in NaFe1 -xNixAs using muon spin rotation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cheung, Sky C.; Guguchia, Zurab; Frandsen, Benjamin A.; Gong, Zizhou; Yamakawa, Kohtaro; Almeida, Dalson E.; Onuorah, Ifeanyi J.; Bonfá, Pietro; Miranda, Eduardo; Wang, Weiyi; Tam, David W.; Song, Yu; Cao, Chongde; Cai, Yipeng; Hallas, Alannah M.; Wilson, Murray N.; Munsie, Timothy J. S.; Luke, Graeme; Chen, Bijuan; Dai, Guangyang; Jin, Changqing; Guo, Shengli; Ning, Fanlong; Fernandes, Rafael M.; De Renzi, Roberto; Dai, Pengcheng; Uemura, Yasutomo J.
2018-06-01
Muon spin rotation and relaxation studies have been performed on a "111" family of iron-based superconductors, NaFe1 -xNixAs , using single crystalline samples with Ni concentrations x =0 , 0.4, 0.6, 1.0, 1.3, and 1.5%. Static magnetic order was characterized by obtaining the temperature and doping dependences of the local ordered magnetic moment size and the volume fraction of the magnetically ordered regions. For x =0 and 0.4%, a transition to a nearly-homogeneous long range magnetically ordered state is observed, while for x ≳0.4 % magnetic order becomes more disordered and is completely suppressed for x =1.5 % . The magnetic volume fraction continuously decreases with increasing x . Development of superconductivity in the full volume is inferred from Meissner shielding results for x ≳0.4 % . The combination of magnetic and superconducting volumes implies that a spatially-overlapping coexistence of magnetism and superconductivity spans a large region of the T -x phase diagram for NaFe1 -xNixAs . A strong reduction of both the ordered moment size and the volume fraction is observed below the superconducting TC for x =0.6 , 1.0, and 1.3%, in contrast to other iron pnictides in which one of these two parameters exhibits a reduction below TC, but not both. The suppression of magnetic order is further enhanced with increased Ni doping, leading to a reentrant nonmagnetic state below TC for x =1.3 % . The reentrant behavior indicates an interplay between antiferromagnetism and superconductivity involving competition for the same electrons. These observations are consistent with the sign-changing s± superconducting state, which is expected to appear on the verge of microscopic coexistence and phase separation with magnetism. We also present a universal linear relationship between the local ordered moment size and the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature TN across a variety of iron-based superconductors. We argue that this linear relationship is consistent with an itinerant-electron approach, in which Fermi surface nesting drives antiferromagnetic ordering. In studies of superconducting properties, we find that the T =0 limit of superfluid density follows the linear trend observed in underdoped cuprates when plotted against TC. This paper also includes a detailed theoretical prediction of the muon stopping sites and provides comparisons with experimental results.
Jeffries, Jason R.; Stillwell, Ryan L.; Weir, Samuel T.; ...
2016-05-09
The material USb 2 is a correlated, moderately heavy-electron compound within the uranium dipnictide (UX 2) series. It is antiferromagnetic with a relatively high transition temperature T N = 204K and a large U-U separation. While the uranium atoms in the lighter dipnictides are considered to be localized, those of USb 2 exhibit hybridization and itineracy, promoting uncertainty as to the continuity of the magnetic order within the UX 2. We have explored the evolution of the magnetic order by employing magnetotransport measurements as a function of pressure and temperature. We find that the T N in USb 2 ismore » enhanced, moving towards that of its smaller sibling UAs 2. But, long before reaching a T N as high as UAs 2, the antiferromagnetism of USb 2 is abruptly destroyed in favor of another magnetic ground state. We identify this pressure-induced ground state as being ferromagnetic based on the appearance of a strong anomalous Hall effect in the transverse resistance in magnetic field. At last with pressure, this emergent ferromagnetic state is suppressed and ultimately destroyed in favor of a non-Fermi-liquid ground state.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jeffries, Jason R.; Stillwell, Ryan L.; Weir, Samuel T.
The material USb 2 is a correlated, moderately heavy-electron compound within the uranium dipnictide (UX 2) series. It is antiferromagnetic with a relatively high transition temperature T N = 204K and a large U-U separation. While the uranium atoms in the lighter dipnictides are considered to be localized, those of USb 2 exhibit hybridization and itineracy, promoting uncertainty as to the continuity of the magnetic order within the UX 2. We have explored the evolution of the magnetic order by employing magnetotransport measurements as a function of pressure and temperature. We find that the T N in USb 2 ismore » enhanced, moving towards that of its smaller sibling UAs 2. But, long before reaching a T N as high as UAs 2, the antiferromagnetism of USb 2 is abruptly destroyed in favor of another magnetic ground state. We identify this pressure-induced ground state as being ferromagnetic based on the appearance of a strong anomalous Hall effect in the transverse resistance in magnetic field. At last with pressure, this emergent ferromagnetic state is suppressed and ultimately destroyed in favor of a non-Fermi-liquid ground state.« less
Shankhari, Pritam; Zhang, Yuemei; Stekovic, Dejan; Itkis, Mikhail E; Fokwa, Boniface P T
2017-11-06
Materials "design" is increasingly gaining importance in the solid-state materials community in general and in the field of magnetic materials in particular. Density functional theory (DFT) predicted the competition between ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground states in a ruthenium-rich Ti 3 Co 5 B 2 -type boride (Hf 2 MnRu 5 B 2 ) for the first time. Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP) total energy calculations indicated that the FM model was marginally more stable than one of the AFM models (AFM1), indicating very weak interactions between magnetic 1D Mn chains that can be easily perturbated by external means (magnetic field or composition). The predicted phase was then synthesized by arc-melting and characterized as Hf 2 Mn 1-x Ru 5+x B 2 (x = 0.27). Vibrating-scanning magnetometry shows an AFM ground state with T N ≈ 20 K under low magnetic field (0.005 T). At moderate-to-higher fields, AFM ordering vanishes while FM ordering emerges with a Curie temperature of 115 K. These experimental outcomes confirm the weak nature of the interchain interactions, as predicted by DFT calculations.
Long range order and two-fluid behavior in heavy electron materials
Shirer, Kent R.; Shockley, Abigail C.; Dioguardi, Adam P.; ...
2012-09-24
The heavy electron Kondo liquid is an emergent state of condensed matter that displays universal behavior independent of material details. Properties of the heavy electron liquid are best probed by NMR Knight shift measurements, which provide a direct measure of the behavior of the heavy electron liquid that emerges below the Kondo lattice coherence temperature as the lattice of local moments hybridizes with the background conduction electrons. Because the transfer of spectral weight between the localized and itinerant electronic degrees of freedom is gradual, the Kondo liquid typically coexists with the local moment component until the material orders at lowmore » temperatures. The two-fluid formula captures this behavior in a broad range of materials in the paramagnetic state. In order to investigate two-fluid behavior and the onset and physical origin of different long range ordered ground states in heavy electron materials, we have extended Knight shift measurements to URu 2Si 2, CeIrIn 5, and CeRhIn 5. In CeRhIn 5 we find that the antiferromagnetic order is preceded by a relocalization of the Kondo liquid, providing independent evidence for a local moment origin of antiferromagnetism. In URu 2Si 2 the hidden order is shown to emerge directly from the Kondo liquid and so is not associated with local moment physics. Lastly, our results imply that the nature of the ground state is strongly coupled with the hybridization in the Kondo lattice in agreement with phase diagram proposed by Yang and Pines.« less
Study of half-metallicity in BiMnxFe1-xO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ameer, Shaan; Jindal, Kajal; Tomar, Monika; Jha, Pradip K.; Gupta, Vinay
2018-05-01
Spin polarized calculations are performed to study the structural and electronic properties of Mn doped BiFeO3 (BMFO) using simplified local spin density approximation (LSDA) functional under density functional theory (DFT). The B-site doping concentration of Mn in BMFO considered to be 16.7 % (BiMn0.167Fe0.833O3). Density of states calculations are carried out for both ferromagnetic (FM) and anti-ferromagnetic (AFM) order in BMFO. The results predict that BMFO is a half metal for both FM and AFM BMFO with magnetization of 29.0000 µB/cell and 1.0000 µB/cell respectively. The ground state of BMFO is found to be antiferromagnetic and demonstrates BMFO to be a potential candidate for spintronic applications.
Unconventional antiferromagnetic correlations of the doped Haldane gapsystem Y 2 BaNi 1 - x Zn x O 5
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Villar, V.; Mélin, R.; Paulsen, C.; Souletie, J.; Janod, E.; Payen, C.
2002-01-01
We make a new proposal to describe the very low temperature susceptibility of the doped Haldane gap compound Y2BaNi1-xZnxO5. We propose a new mean field model relevant for this compound. The ground state of this mean field model is unconventional because antiferromagnetism coexists with random dimers. We present new susceptibility experiments at very low temperature. We obtain a Curie-Weiss susceptibility χ(T) C/(Θ + T) as expected for antiferromagnetic correlations but we do not obtain a direct signature of antiferromagnetic long range order. We explain how to obtain the ``impurity'' susceptibility (T) by subtracting the Haldane gap contribution to the total susceptibility. In the temperature range [1 K, 300 K] the experimental data are well fitted by T (T) = Cimp 1 + Timp/T . In the temperature range [100 mK, 1 K] the experimental data are well fitted by T (T) = A ln(T/Tc), where Tc increases with x. This fit suggests the existence of a finite Néel temperature which is however too small to be probed directly in our experiments. We also obtain a maximum in the temperature dependence of the ac-susceptibility (T) which suggests the existence of antiferromagnetic correlations at very low temperature.
Antiferromagnetism and superconductivity in the half-Heusler semimetal HoPdBi
Pavlosiuk, Orest; Kaczorowski, Dariusz; Fabreges, Xavier; Gukasov, Arsen; Wiśniewski, Piotr
2016-01-01
We observed the coexistence of superconductivity and antiferromagnetic order in the single-crystalline ternary pnictide HoPdBi, a plausible topological semimetal. The compound orders antiferromagnetically at TN = 1.9 K and exhibits superconductivity below Tc = 0.7 K, which was confirmed by magnetic, electrical transport and specific heat measurements. The specific heat shows anomalies corresponding to antiferromagnetic ordering transition and crystalline field effect, but not to superconducting transition. Single-crystal neutron diffraction indicates that the antiferromagnetic structure is characterized by the propagation vector. Temperature variation of the electrical resistivity reveals two parallel conducting channels of semiconducting and metallic character. In weak magnetic fields, the magnetoresistance exhibits weak antilocalization effect, while in strong fields and temperatures below 50 K it is large and negative. At temperatures below 7 K Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations with two frequencies appear in the resistivity. These oscillations have non-trivial Berry phase, which is a distinguished feature of Dirac fermions. PMID:26728755
Polyanion Driven Antiferromagnetic and Insulating Ground State of Olivine Phosphates: LiMPO4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jena, Ajit Kumar; Nanda, B. R. K.; Condensed Matter Theory; Computation Team
Through density functional calculations we have investigated the electronic and magnetic properties of LiMPO4, where M is a 3d transition metal element. We find that contrary to many transition metal oxides, in these Olivine phosphates the band gap is originated due to crystal field anisotropy as well as weak O-p - M-d covalent interaction. Both of them are attributed to the presence of PO43- polyanion. The anisotropic crystal field, in the absence of covalent interactions, creates atomically localized non-degenerate M-d states and therefore the gap is a natural outcome. Onsite repulsion, due to strong correlation effect, further enhances the gap. These localized d states favor high-spin configuration which leads to antiferromagnetic ordering due to Hund's coupling. Experimentally observed low Neel temperature of this family of compounds is explained from the DFT obtained spin exchange interaction parameters. Work supported by Nissan Research Program.
Deconfined quantum critical point on the triangular lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jian, Chao-Ming; Thomson, Alex; Rasmussen, Alex; Bi, Zhen; Xu, Cenke
2018-05-01
In this work we propose a theory for the deconfined quantum critical point (DQCP) for spin-1/2 systems on a triangular lattice, which is a direct unfine-tuned quantum phase transition between the standard "√{3 }×√{3 } " noncollinear antiferromagnetic order (or the so-called 120∘ state) and the "√{12 }×√{12 } " valence solid bond (VBS) order, both of which are very standard ordered phases often observed in numerical simulations. This transition is beyond the standard Landau-Ginzburg paradigm and is also fundamentally different from the original DQCP theory on the square lattice due to the very different structures of both the magnetic and VBS order on frustrated lattices. We first propose a topological term in the effective-field theory that captures the "intertwinement" between the √{3 }×√{3 } antiferromagnetic order and the √{12 }×√{12 } VBS order. Then using a controlled renormalization-group calculation, we demonstrate that an unfine-tuned direct continuous DQCP exists between the two ordered phases mentioned above. This DQCP is described by the Nf=4 quantum electrodynamics (QED) with an emergent PSU(4)=SU(4)/Z4 symmetry only at the critical point. The aforementioned topological term is also naturally derived from the Nf=4 QED. We also point out that physics around this DQCP is analogous to the boundary of a 3 d bosonic symmetry- protected topological state with only on-site symmetries.
Tricritical point of the f -electron antiferromagnet US b 2 driven by high magnetic fields
Stillwell, R. L.; Liu, I. -L.; Harrison, Neil; ...
2017-01-12
In pulsed magnetic fields up to 65 T and at temperatures below the Néel transition, our magnetization and magnetostriction measurements reveal a field-induced metamagneticlike transition that is suggestive of an antiferromagnetic to ferrimagnetic ordering. Our data also suggest a change in the nature of this metamagneticlike transition from second- to first-order-like near a tricritical point at T tc ~ 145K and H c ~ 52 T. At high fields for H > H c we found a decreased magnetic moment roughly half of the moment determined by neutron powder diffraction. Lastly, we propose that the decreased moment and lack ofmore » saturation at high fields indicate the presence of a field-induced ferrimagnetic state above the tricritical point of the H-T phase diagram for USb 2.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Cao, G.; McCall, S.; Crow, J.
1997-03-01
Single crystal Ca{sub 3}Ru{sub 2}O{sub 7} shows a metallic antiferromagnetic phase intermediate between a first-order metal to nonmetal transition at T{sub M}=48K and the antiferromagnetic ordering (N{acute e}el) temperature, T{sub N}=56K. The metallic antiferromagnetic phase is predicted within various Mott-Hubbard models. Magnetization and electrical resistivity reveal strongly anisotropic metamagnetism in the nonmetallic antiferromagnetic phase. The charge and spin excitations are strongly coupled: The H-T phase diagrams determined by magnetization and magnetoresistivity are indistinguishable and reveal a multicritical point. The heat capacity of Ca{sub 3}Ru{sub 2}O{sub 7} suggests it is a highly correlated electron system. {copyright} {ital 1997} {ital The Americanmore » Physical Society}« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Comyn, Tim P.; Stevenson, Tim; Al-Jawad, Maisoon; Marshall, William G.; Smith, Ronald I.; Herrero-Albillos, Julia; Cywinski, Robert; Bell, Andrew J.
2013-05-01
BiFeO3-PbTiO3 exhibits both ferroelectric and antiferromagnetic order, depending on the composition. Moderate hydrostatic pressures have been used at room temperature to transform the crystallographic phase from P4mm to R3c for the compositions 0.7BiFeO3-0.3PbTiO3 and 0.65BiFeO3-0.35PbTiO3, as determined using in-situ neutron diffraction. Using Rietveld refinements, the resultant data showed that, for both compositions, a transformation from para- to G-type antiferromagnetic order accompanied the structural transition. The transformation occurred over the range 0.4-0.77 and 0.67-0.88 GPa for 0.7BiFeO3-0.3PbTiO3 and 0.65BiFeO3-0.35PbTiO3, respectively; at intermediate pressures, a mixture of P4mm and R3c phases were evident. These pressures are far lower than required to induce a phase transition in either the BiFeO3 or PbTiO3 end members. The driving force for this pressure induced first order phase transition is a significant difference in volume between the two phases, P4mm > R3c of 4%-5%, at ambient pressure. Upon removal of the pressure, 0.65BiFeO3-0.35PbTiO3 returned to the paramagnetic tetragonal state, whereas in 0.7BiFeO3-0.3PbTiO3 antiferromagnetic ordering persisted, and the structural phase remained rhombohedral. Using conventional laboratory x-ray diffraction with a hot-stage, the phase readily reverted back to a tetragonal phase, at temperatures between 100 and 310 °C for 0.7BiFeO3-0.3PbTiO3, far lower than the ferroelectric Curie point for this composition of 632 °C. To our knowledge, the reported pressure induced para- to antiferromagnetic transition is unique in the literature.
Magnetic Orders of LaTiO3 and YTiO3 Under Epitaxial Strain: a First-Principles study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Weng, Yakui; Huang, Xin; Tang, Yankun; Dong, Shuai
2014-03-01
Perovskite RTiO3 family is a typical Mott-insulator with localized 3d electrons. In this work, the epitaxial strain effects on the ground magnetic orders of LaTiO3 and YTiO3 films have been studied using the first-principles density-functional theory. For the YTiO3 films, A-type antiferromagnetic order emerges against the original ferromagnetic order under the in-plane compressive strain by LaAlO3 (001) substrate, although the A-type antiferromagnetic order does not exist in any RTiO3 bulks. Then, for the LaTiO3 films under the compressive strain, e.g. LaTiO3 films grown on LaAlO3, LaGaO3, and SrTiO3 substrates, undergo a phase transition from the original G-type antiferromagnetism to A-type antiferromagnetism. While under the tensile strain, e.g. grown on the BaTiO3 and LaScO3 substrate, LaTiO3 films show a tendency to transit to the C-type antiferromagnetism. Furthermore, our calculations find that the magnetic transitions under epitaxial strain do not change the insulating fact of LaTiO3 and YTiO3.
Superconductivity drives magnetism in δ -doped La2CuO4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suter, A.; Logvenov, G.; Boris, A. V.; Baiutti, F.; Wrobel, F.; Howald, L.; Stilp, E.; Salman, Z.; Prokscha, T.; Keimer, B.
2018-04-01
Understanding the interplay between different orders in a solid is a key challenge in highly correlated electronic systems. In real systems this is even more difficult since disorder can have strong influence on the subtle balance between these orders and thus can obscure the interpretation of the observed physical properties. Here we present a study on δ -doped La2CuO4 (δ -LCON ) superlattices. By means of molecular beam epitaxy whole LaO2 layers were periodically replaced by SrO2 layers, providing a charge reservoir yet reducing the level of disorder typically present in doped cuprates to an absolute minimum. The induced superconductivity and its interplay with the antiferromagnetic order is studied by means of low-energy muon spin rotation. We find a quasi-two-dimensional superconducting state which couples to the antiferromagnetic order in a nontrivial way. Below the superconducting transition temperature, the magnetic volume fraction increases strongly. The reason could be a charge redistribution of the free carriers due to the opening of the superconducting gap which is possible due to the close proximity and low disorder between the different ordered regions.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nadeem, M., E-mail: mnadeemsb@gmail.com; Iqbal, M. Javid; Farhan, M. Arshad
2016-08-15
Highlights: • Concept of normalized magnetization is introduced to explain relative magnetic transitions. • Coexistence of two magnetic modes is correlated with the magnetic transitions and MIT. • Field induced melting and collapse of charge ordered antiferromagnetic (CO-AFM) state into ferromagnetic (FM) state is conferred. - Abstract: The magnetic properties of polycrystalline La{sub 0.5-x}Pr{sub x}Ca{sub 0.5}MnO{sub 3} material are investigated at different temperatures. The existence of magnetically diverse phases associated with various relaxation modes and their modulation with temperature and doping is analyzed. La{sub 0.5}Ca{sub 0.5}MnO{sub 3} exhibited field induced melting and collapse of charge ordered antiferromagnetic (CO-AFM) phase intomore » ferromagnetic (FM) state. This phenomenon results in lowering of Neel’s temperature (T{sub N}) along with changes in the slope of magnetic moment with temperature. Using normalized M(T) curves, the variation and interplay of charge ordered temperature (T{sub CO}), Curie temperature (T{sub C}) and T{sub N} is conferred. The coexistence of two magnetic modes is explained as major ingredient for the magnetic transitions as well as metal to insulator transition (MIT); where melting and collapse of charge ordering is conversed as basic feature in these Praseodymium (Pr) doped La{sub 0.5}Ca{sub 0.5}MnO{sub 3} materials.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Biswas, Sounak; Damle, Kedar
2018-02-01
A transverse magnetic field Γ is known to induce antiferromagnetic three-sublattice order of the Ising spins σz in the triangular lattice Ising antiferromagnet at low enough temperature. This low-temperature order is known to melt on heating in a two-step manner, with a power-law ordered intermediate temperature phase characterized by power-law correlations at the three-sublattice wave vector Q : <σz(R ⃗) σz(0 ) > ˜cos(Q .R ⃗) /|R⃗| η (T ) with the temperature-dependent power-law exponent η (T )∈(1 /9 ,1 /4 ) . Here, we use a quantum cluster algorithm to study the ferromagnetic easy-axis susceptibility χu(L ) of an L ×L sample in this power-law ordered phase. Our numerical results are consistent with a recent prediction of a singular L dependence χu(L ) ˜L2 -9 η when η (T ) is in the range (1 /9 ,2 /9 ) . This finite-size result implies, via standard scaling arguments, that the ferromagnetic susceptibility χu(B ) to a uniform field B along the easy axis is singular at intermediate temperatures in the small B limit, χu(B ) ˜|B| -4/-18 η 4 -9 η for η (T )∈(1 /9 ,2 /9 ) , although there is no ferromagnetic long-range order in the low temperature state. Additionally we establish similar two-step melting behavior (via a study of the order parameter susceptibility χQ) in the case of the ferrimagnetic three-sublattice ordered phase which is stabilized by ferromagnetic next-neighbor couplings (J2) and confirm that the ferromagnetic susceptibility obeys the predicted singular form in the associated power-law ordered phase.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sakakida, Keishiro; Shimahara, Hiroshi
2017-12-01
Motivated by recently discovered organic antiferromagnets, we examine an extended triangular lattice that consists of two types of triangles of bonds with exchange coupling constants Jℓ and J'ℓ (ℓ= 1, 2, and 3), respectively. The simplified system with Jℓ = J'ℓ > 0 is the spatially completely anisotropic triangular lattice (SCATL) antiferromagnet examined previously. The extended system, which we call an extended SCATL (ESCATL), has two different spatial anisotropy parameters J3/J2 and J'3/J'2 when J1 = J'1 is assumed. We derive classical phase diagrams and spin structures. It is found that the ESCATL antiferromagnet exhibits two up-up-down-down (uudd) phases when the imbalance of the anisotropy parameters is significant, in addition to the three Néel phases that occur in the SCATL. When the model parameters vary, these collinear phases are continuously connected by the spiral-spin phase. Using the available model parameters for the organic compounds λ-(BETS)2XCl4 (X = Fe and Ga), we examine the stabilities of the spin structures of the independent π-electron system, which is considered to primarily sustain the magnetic order, where BETS represents bis(ethylenedithio)tetraselenafulvalene. It is found that one of the uudd phases has an energy close to the ground-state energy for λ-(BETS)2FeCl4. We discuss the relevance of the magnetic anion FeCl4 and the quantum fluctuation to the magnetism of these compounds. When J'3 = 0, the system is reduced to a trellis lattice antiferromagnet. The system exhibits a stripe spiral-spin phase, which comprises one-dimensional spiral-spin states stacked alternately.
Low temperature synthesis of LnOF rare-earth oxyfluorides through reaction of the oxides with PTFE
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Dutton, S.E., E-mail: sdutton@princeton.edu; Hirai, D.; Cava, R.J.
2012-03-15
Highlights: Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer Low temperature synthesis of LnOF rare-earth oxyfluorides from Ln{sub 2}O{sub 3} and PTFE (CF{sub 2}). Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer Rhombohedral LnOF is the major phase and forms as nanocrystals, 29-103 nm. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer Expected lanthanide contraction observed in lattice parameters and bond lengths. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer TbOF orders antiferromagnetically at 10 K and has a metamagnetic transition at 1.8 T. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer GdOF orders antiferromagnetically at 5 K, other LnOF are paramagnetic. -- Abstract: A low temperature solid-state synthesis route, employing polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and the rare-earth oxides, for the formation of the LnOF rare-earth oxyfluorides (Ln = Y, La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb,more » Dy, Ho, Er), is reported. With the exception of LaOF, which forms in a tetragonal variant, rhomobohedral LnOF is found to be the major product of the reaction. In the case of PrOF, a transition from the rhombohedral to the cubic fluorite phase is observed on heating in air to 500 Degree-Sign C. X-ray diffraction shows the expected lanthanide contraction in the lattice parameters and bond lengths. Magnetic susceptibility measurements show antiferromagnetic-like ordering in TbOF, T{sub m} = 10 K, with a metamagnetic transition at a field {mu}{sub 0}H{sub t} = 1.8 T at 2 K. An antiferromagnetic transition, T{sub N} = 4 K, is observed in GdOF. Paramagnetic behavior is observed above 2 K in PrOF, NdOF, DyOF, HoOF and ErOF. The magnetic susceptibility of EuOF is characteristic of Van Vleck paramagnetism.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yan, X.; Chen, Xing-Qiu; Michor, H.; Wolf, W.; Witusiewicz, V. T.; Bauer, E.; Podloucky, R.; Rogl, P.
2018-03-01
By combining theoretical density functional theory (DFT) and experimental studies, structural and magnetic phase stabilities and electronic structural, elastic, and vibrational properties of the Laves-phase compound NbMn2 have been investigated for the C14, C15, and C36 crystal structures. At low temperatures C14 is the ground-state structure, with ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orderings being degenerate in energy. The degenerate spin configurations result in a rather large electronic density of states at Fermi energy for all magnetic cases, even for the spin-polarized DFT calculations. Based on the DFT-derived phonon dispersions and densities of states, temperature-dependent free energies were derived for the ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic C14 phase, demonstrating that the spin-configuration degeneracy possibly exists up to finite temperatures. The heat of formation Δ298H0=-45.05 ±3.64 kJ (molf .u .NbMn2) -1 was extracted from drop isoperibolic calorimetry in a Ni bath. The DFT-derived enthalpy of formation of NbMn2 is in good agreement with the calorimetric measurements. Second-order elastic constants for NbMn2 as well as for related compounds were calculated.
Incommensurate to commensurate antiferromagnetism in CeRhAl 4 Si 2 : An Al 27 NMR study
Sakai, Hironori; Hattori, T.; Tokunaga, Y.; ...
2016-01-04
27Al nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments have been performed on a single crystal of CeRhAl 4Si 2, which is an antiferromagnetic Kondo-lattice compound with successive antiferromagnetic transitions of T N1 = 14 K and T N2 = 9 K at zero external field. In the paramagnetic state, the Knight shifts, quadrupolar frequency, and asymmetric parameter of electrical field gradient on the Al sites have been determined, which have local orthorhombic symmetry. The transferred hyperfine coupling constants are also determined. Here, analysis of the NMR spectra indicates that a commensurate antiferromagnetic structure exists below T N2, but an incommensurate modulation ofmore » antiferromagnetic moments is present in the antiferromagnetic state between T N1 and T N2. The spin-lattice relaxation rate suggests that the 4f electrons behave as local moments at temperatures above T N1.« less
Magnetic order in a frustrated two-dimensional atom lattice at a semiconductor surface.
Li, Gang; Höpfner, Philipp; Schäfer, Jörg; Blumenstein, Christian; Meyer, Sebastian; Bostwick, Aaron; Rotenberg, Eli; Claessen, Ralph; Hanke, Werner
2013-01-01
Two-dimensional electron systems, as exploited for device applications, can lose their conducting properties because of local Coulomb repulsion, leading to a Mott-insulating state. In triangular geometries, any concomitant antiferromagnetic spin ordering can be prevented by geometric frustration, spurring speculations about 'melted' phases, known as spin liquid. Here we show that for a realization of a triangular electron system by epitaxial atom adsorption on a semiconductor, such spin disorder, however, does not appear. Our study compares the electron excitation spectra obtained from theoretical simulations of the correlated electron lattice with data from high-resolution photoemission. We find that an unusual row-wise antiferromagnetic spin alignment occurs that is reflected in the photoemission spectra as characteristic 'shadow bands' induced by the spin pattern. The magnetic order in a frustrated lattice of otherwise non-magnetic components emerges from longer-range electron hopping between the atoms. This finding can offer new ways of controlling magnetism on surfaces.
Frustrated spin-1/2 Ising antiferromagnet on a square lattice in a transverse field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bobák, A.; Jurčišinová, E.; Jurčišin, M.; Žukovič, M.
2018-02-01
We investigate the phase transitions and tricritical behaviors of the frustrated Ising antiferromagnet with first- (J1<0 ) and second- (J2<0 ) nearest-neighbor interactions in a transverse field Ω on the square lattice using an effective-field theory with correlations based on a single-spin approximation. We have proposed a functional for the free energy to obtain the phase diagram in the T -R (R =J2/|J1| ) or T -Ω planes. It is shown that due to the transverse field the phase transition between ordered and disordered phases changes in the tricritical point (TCP) from the second order to the first order. The longitudinal and transverse magnetizations are also studied for selected values of R and Ω . In particular, the variation of TCP at the ground state in the three-dimensional space is constructed. For some special cases, values of the critical temperature and the critical transverse field have been determined analytically.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lin, J. C.; Tong, P., E-mail: tongpeng@issp.ac.cn; Lin, S.
2015-02-23
The thermal expansion and magnetic properties of antiperovskite manganese nitrides Ag{sub 1−x}NMn{sub 3+x} were reported. The substitution of Mn for Ag effectively broadens the temperature range of negative thermal expansion and drives it to cryogenic temperatures. As x increases, the paramagnetic (PM) to antiferromagnetic (AFM) phase transition temperature decreases. At x ∼ 0.2, the PM-AFM transition overlaps with the AFM to glass-like state transition. Above x = 0.2, two new distinct magnetic transitions were observed: One occurs above room temperature from PM to ferromagnetic (FM), and the other one evolves at a lower temperature (T{sup *}) below which both AFM and FM orderings aremore » involved. Further, electron spin resonance measurement suggests that the broadened volume change near T{sup *} is closely related with the evolution of Γ{sup 5g} AFM ordering.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gorev, M.V., E-mail: gorev@iph.krasn.ru; Institute of Engineering Physics and Radio Electronics, Siberian State University, 660074 Krasnoyarsk; Flerov, I.N.
2016-05-15
Heat capacity, Mössbauer and Raman spectra as well as magnetic properties of fluoride CsFe{sub 2}F{sub 6} with defect pyrochlore structure were studied. In addition to recently found above room temperature three successive structural transformations Pnma-Imma-I4{sub 1}amd-Fd-3m, phase transition of antiferromagnetic nature with the 13.7 K Neel temperature and a broad heat capacity anomaly with a maximum at about 30 K were observed. The room temperature symmetry Pnma is unchanged at least down to 7 K. Simple model of indirect bond used to estimate the exchange interactions and to propose a magnetic structure model. - Graphical abstract: The ordered arrangement ofmore » Fe{sup 2+} and Fe{sup 3+} ions in high-spin states as well as antiferromagnetic phase transition followed by significant magnetic frustrations were found in pyrocholore-related CsFe{sup 2+}Fe{sup 3+}F{sub 6}. A magnetic structure was proposed using a simple model of indirect bonds. - Highlights: • The Pnma structure in pyrocholore CsFe{sub 2}F{sub 6} is stable down to helium temperature. • Mössbauer spectra confirmed the ordering of Fe{sup 2+} and Fe{sup 3+} ions. • Antiferromagnetic transformation and significant magnetic frustrations are found. • Experimental magnetic entropy agrees with entropy for Fe ions in high-spin state. • Superexchange interactions were calculated and a magnetic structure was proposed.« less
Magnetic orders of LaTiO3 under epitaxial strain: A first-principles study
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Weng, Yakui; Huang, Xin; Tang, Yankun; Dong, Shuai
2014-05-01
Perovskite LaTiO3 bulk is a typical Mott-insulator with G-type antiferromagnetic order. In this work, the biaxial strain effects on the ground magnetic order of LaTiO3 films grown on various substrates have been studied. For the compressive strain, LaTiO3 films grown on LaAlO3, LaGaO3, and SrTiO3 substrates undergo a phase transition from the original G-type antiferromagnet to A-type antiferromagnet. The underlying physical mechanisms are the lattice distortions tunned by strain. While for the tensile strain, the BaTiO3 and LaScO3 substrates have been tested, which show a tendency to transit the LaTiO3 to the C-type antiferromagnet. Furthermore, our calculations find that the magnetic transitions under epitaxial strain do not change the insulating fact of LaTiO3.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhang, Qiang; Ye, Feng; Tian, Wei; Cao, Huibo; Chi, Songxue; Hu, Biao; Diao, Zhenyu; Tennant, David A.; Jin, Rongying; Zhang, Jiandi; Plummer, Ward
2017-06-01
Bilayered S r3R u2O7 is an unusual metamagnetic metal with inherently antiferromagnetic (AFM) and ferromagnetic (FM) fluctuations. Partial substitution of Ru by Mn results in the establishment of a metal-insulator transition (MIT) at TMIT and AFM ordering at TM in S r3(Ru1-xM nx) 2O7 . Using elastic neutron scattering, we investigated the effect of Mn doping on the magnetic structure, in-plane magnetic correlation lengths and their correlation to the MIT in S r3(Ru1-xM nx) 2O7 (x =0.06 and 0.12). With the increase of Mn doping (x ) from 0.06 to 0.12 or the decrease of temperatures for x =0.12 , an evolution from an in-plane short-range to long-range antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground state occurs. For both compounds, the magnetic ordering has a double-stripe configuration, and the onset of magnetic correlation with an anisotropic behavior coincides with the sharp rise in electrical resistivity and specific heat. Since it does not induce a measurable lattice distortion, the double-stripe antiferromagnetic order with anisotropic spin texture breaks symmetry from a C4 v crystal lattice to a C2 v magnetic sublattice. These observations shed light on an age-old question regarding the Slater versus Mott-type MIT.
Berry phases emerging from the π-flux state
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tanaka, Akihiro; Hu, Xiao
2005-03-01
We derive a new effective action describing fluctuations around the Affleck-Marston π-flux mean-field solution of the 2d Heisenberg antiferromagnet. The 5-dimensional Clifford algebra inherent in the Dirac fermion obtained as the continuum limit of the π-flux state is found to sustain a bulit-in competition between antiferromagnet (AF) and valence-bond-solid (VBS) orders. This naturally leads us to cast both orderings as components of a 5 component vectorial field v, for which we obtain an O(5) nonlinear sigma model with a novel Wess- Zumino (WZ) term proportional to the Mauer-Cartan form 0^1 dtd^3 x v dv dv dv dv, with t[0,1] an auxiliary variable which extends v(x) to v(t,x) in such a way that v(t=0,x)≡(0,0,0,0,1) and v(t=1,x)≡v(x) are satisfied. We study properties of Berry phases extracted from this WZ term, and recover in particular the AF hedgehog Berry phases (with a VBS core) which are central to recent studies on 2D spin liquids.
Quantum phases in circuit QED with a superconducting qubit array
Zhang, Yuanwei; Yu, Lixian; Liang, J. -Q; Chen, Gang; Jia, Suotang; Nori, Franco
2014-01-01
Circuit QED on a chip has become a powerful platform for simulating complex many-body physics. In this report, we realize a Dicke-Ising model with an antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbor spin-spin interaction in circuit QED with a superconducting qubit array. We show that this system exhibits a competition between the collective spin-photon interaction and the antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbor spin-spin interaction, and then predict four quantum phases, including: a paramagnetic normal phase, an antiferromagnetic normal phase, a paramagnetic superradiant phase, and an antiferromagnetic superradiant phase. The antiferromagnetic normal phase and the antiferromagnetic superradiant phase are new phases in many-body quantum optics. In the antiferromagnetic superradiant phase, both the antiferromagnetic and superradiant orders can coexist, and thus the system possesses symmetry. Moreover, we find an unconventional photon signature in this phase. In future experiments, these predicted quantum phases could be distinguished by detecting both the mean-photon number and the magnetization. PMID:24522250
CePt2In7: Shubnikov-de Haas measurements on micro-structured samples under high pressures
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kanter, J.; Moll, P.; Friedemann, S.; Alireza, P.; Sutherland, M.; Goh, S.; Ronning, F.; Bauer, E. D.; Batlogg, B.
2014-03-01
CePt2In7 belongs to the CemMnIn3 m + 2 n heavy fermion family, but compared to the Ce MIn5 members of this group, exhibits a more two dimensional electronic structure. At zero pressure the ground state is antiferromagnetically ordered. Under pressure the antiferromagnetic order is suppressed and a superconducting phase is induced, with a maximum Tc above a quantum critical point around 31 kbar. To investigate the changes in the Fermi Surface and effective electron masses around the quantum critical point, Shubnikov-de Haas measurements were conducted under high pressures in an anvil cell. The samples were micro-structured and contacted using a Focused Ion Beam (FIB). The Focused Ion Beam enables sample contacting and structuring down to a sub-micrometer scale, making the measurement of several samples with complex shapes and multiple contacts on a single anvil feasible.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Greenblatt, M.; McCarroll, W.H.; Nair, K.R.
1984-06-01
Electric conductivity (77-300K) and magnetic susceptibility (4.2-300K) of rutile type polycrystalline samples of CrVNbO/sub 6/, FeVNbO/sub 6/ and NiV/sub 2/Nb/sub 2/O/sub 10/ are reported. All three compounds are n-type semiconductors with room-temperature resistivities of the order of 10/sup 2/-10/sup 3/ ohm-cm. CrVNbO/sub 6/ shows ferromagnetic coupling in the high-temperature region and orders antiferromagnetically below 10K. FeVNbO/sub 6/ transforms to a spin glass state below 20K. NiV/sub 2/Nb/sub 2/O/sub 10/ shows evidence of weak antiferromagnetic interactions. The transport properties of the compounds are discussed in terms of structural properties and unpaired d electrons present on the respective transition metal ions.
Successive field-induced transitions in BiFeO 3 around room temperature
Kawachi, Shiro; Miyake, Atsushi; Ito, Toshimitsu; ...
2017-07-21
The effects of high magnetic fields applied perpendicular to the spontaneous ferroelectric polarization on single crystals of BiFeO 3 were investigated in this paper through magnetization, magnetostriction, and neutron diffraction measurements. The magnetostriction measurements revealed lattice distortion of 2 x 10 -5 during the reorientation process of the cycloidal spin order by applied magnetic fields. Furthermore, anomalous changes in magnetostriction and electric polarization at a larger field demonstrate an intermediate phase between cycloidal and canted antiferromagnetic states, where a large magnetoelectric effect was observed. Neutron diffraction measurements clarified that incommensurate spin modulation along the [110] hex direction in the cycloidalmore » phase becomes Q = 0 commensurate along this direction in the intermediate phase. Finally, theoretical calculations based on the standard spin Hamiltonian of this material suggest an antiferromagnetic cone-type spin order in the intermediate phase.« less
Kinetically Inhibited Order in a Diamond-Lattice Antiferromagnet
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
MacDougall, Gregory J; Gout, Delphine J; Zarestky, Jerel L
2011-01-01
Frustrated magnetic systems exhibit highly degenerate ground states and strong fluctuations, often leading to new physics. An intriguing example of current interest is the antiferromagnet on a diamond lattice, realized physically in the A-site spinel materials. This is a prototypical system in three dimensions where frustration arises from competing interactions rather than purely geometric constraints, and theory suggests the possibility of novel order at low temperature. Here we present a comprehensive single crystal neutron scattering study CoAl2O4, a highly frustrated A-site spinel. We observe strong diffuse scattering that peaks at wavevectors associated with Neel ordering. Below the temperature T*=6.5K, theremore » is a dramatic change in elastic scattering lineshape accompanied by the emergence of well-defined spin-wave excitations. T* had previously been associated with the onset of glassy behavior. Our new results suggest instead that in fact T* signifies a first-order phase transition, but with true long-range order inhibited by the kinetic freezing of domain walls. This scenario might be expected to occur widely in frustrated systems containing first-order phase transitions and is a natural explanation for existing reports of anomalous glassy behavior in other materials.« less
Magnetic Correlations in URu2Si2 under Chemical and Hydrostatic Pressure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Williams, Travis; Aczel, Adam; Broholm, Collin; Buyers, William; Leao, Juscelino; Luke, Graeme; Rodriguez-Riviera, Jose; Stone, Matthew; Wilson, Murray; Yamani, Zahra
URu2Si2 has been an intense area of study for the last 30 years due to a mysterious hidden order phase that appears below T0 = 17.5 K. The hidden order phase has been shown to be extremely sensitive to perturbations, being destroyed quickly by the application of a magnetic field, hydrostatic or uniaxial pressure, and chemical doping. While attempting to understand the properties of URu2Si2, neutron scattering has found spin correlations that are intimately related to this hidden order phase and which are also suppressed with these perturbations. Here, I will outline some recent neutron scattering work to study these correlations in two exceptional cases where the hidden order phase is enhanced: hydrostatic pressure and chemical pressure using Fe- and Os-doping. In both of these cases, T0 increases before an antiferromagnetic phase emerges. By performing a careful analysis of the neutron data, we show that these two phases are much more related than had been previously appreciated. This implies that the hidden order is likely compatible with an antiferromagnetic ground state, placing constraints on the nature of the missing order parameter.
Strain-Induced Ferromagnetism in Antiferromagnetic LuMnO3 Thin Films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
White, J. S.; Bator, M.; Hu, Y.; Luetkens, H.; Stahn, J.; Capelli, S.; Das, S.; Döbeli, M.; Lippert, Th.; Malik, V. K.; Martynczuk, J.; Wokaun, A.; Kenzelmann, M.; Niedermayer, Ch.; Schneider, C. W.
2013-07-01
Single phase and strained LuMnO3 thin films are discovered to display coexisting ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orders. A large moment ferromagnetism (≈1μB), which is absent in bulk samples, is shown to display a magnetic moment distribution that is peaked at the highly strained substrate-film interface. We further show that the strain-induced ferromagnetism and the antiferromagnetic order are coupled via an exchange field, therefore demonstrating strained rare-earth manganite thin films as promising candidate systems for new multifunctional devices.
Local suppression of the hidden-order phase by impurities in URu2Si2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pezzoli, Maria E.; Graf, Matthias J.; Haule, Kristjan; Kotliar, Gabriel; Balatsky, Alexander V.
2011-06-01
We consider the effects of impurities on the enigmatic hidden order (HO) state of the heavy-fermion material URu2Si2. In particular, we focus on local effects of Rh impurities as a tool to probe the suppression of the HO state. To study local properties, we introduce a lattice free energy, where the time invariant HO order parameter Ψ and local antiferromagnetic (AFM) order parameter M are competing orders. Near each Rh atom, the HO order parameter is suppressed, creating a hole in which local AFM order emerges as a result of competition. These local holes are created in the fabric of the HO state like in a Swiss cheese and “filled” with droplets of AFM order. We compare our analysis with recent NMR results on U(RhxRu1-x)2Si2 and find good agreement with the data.
Magnetocaloric effect in Gd1-x Ndx Zn2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Matsumoto, Keisuke T.; Hiraoka, Koichi
2017-09-01
The magnetization of Gd1-xNdxZn2 (0 < x ⩽ 1) was measured to study the effect of Nd substitution in GdZn2 with a Curie temperature of 85 K and a spin-reorientation transition temperature of 58 K on the magnetocaloric effect. The Nd counterpart NdZn2 shows antiferromagnetic order at 23 K. Samples of Gd1-xNdxZn2 (0 < x ⩽ 1) were prepared by the melt-growth method. In Nd-substituted systems, the anomaly due to spin-reorientation disappeared. For x ⩾ 0.6 , field-induced metamagnetic transitions were observed, indicating an antiferromagnetic ground state. This complex magnetism may originate from competition between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions. Magnetic entropy change ΔSm was calculated based on the magnetization measurements. ΔSm was suppressed by Nd substitution for x values up to 0.6. For x = 1 (NdZn2), the maximum value of ΔSm was -9 J/K kg, which is almost the same as those of other Nd-based magnetocaloric materials.
Currentless reversal of Néel vector in antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Semenov, Yuriy; Li, Xilai; Kim, Ki Wook
The bias driven perpendicular magnetic anisotropy is a magneto-electric effect that can realize 900 magnetization rotation and even 1800 flip along the easy axis in the ferromagnets with a minimal energy consumption. This study theoretically demonstrates a similar phenomenon of the Néel vector reversal via a short electrical pulse that can mediate perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in the antiferromagnets. The analysis based on the dynamical equations as well as the micromagnetic simulations reveals the important role of the inertial behavior in the antiferromagnets that facilitates the Néel vector to overcome the barrier between two free-energy minima of the bistable states along the easy axis. In contrast to the ferromagnets, this Néel vector reversal does not accompany angular moment transfer to the environment, leading to acceleration in the dynamical response by a few orders of magnitude. Further, a small switching energy requirement of a few attojoules illustrates an added advantage of the phenomenon in low-power spintronic applications.
Yang, Qu; Zhou, Ziyao; Wang, Liqian; Zhang, Hongjia; Cheng, Yuxin; Hu, Zhongqiang; Peng, Bin; Liu, Ming
2018-05-01
To meet the demand of developing compatible and energy-efficient flexible spintronics, voltage manipulation of magnetism on soft substrates is in demand. Here, a voltage tunable flexible field-effect transistor structure by ionic gel (IG) gating in perpendicular synthetic anti-ferromagnetic nanostructure is demonstrated. As a result, the interlayer Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interaction can be tuned electrically at room temperature. With a circuit gating voltage, anti-ferromagnetic (AFM) ordering is enhanced or converted into an AFM-ferromagnetic (FM) intermediate state, accompanying with the dynamic domain switching. This IG gating process can be repeated stably at different curvatures, confirming an excellent mechanical property. The IG-induced modification of interlayer exchange coupling is related to the change of Fermi level aroused by the disturbance of itinerant electrons. The voltage modulation of RKKY interaction with excellent flexibility proposes an application potential for wearable spintronic devices with energy efficiency and ultralow operation voltage. © 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Coupled antiferromagnetic spin- 1 2 chains in green dioptase Cu 6 [ Si 6 O 18 ] · 6 H 2 O
Podlesnyak, Andrey A; Larry M. Anovitz; Kolesnikov, Alexander I; ...
2016-02-01
Inmore » this paper, we report inelastic neutron scattering measurements of the magnetic excitations of green dioptase Cu 6[Si 6O 18]∙6H 2O. The observed spectrum contains two magnetic modes and a prominent spin gap that is consistent with the ordered ground state of Cu moments coupled antiferromagnetically in spiral chains along the c axis and ferromagnetically in ab planes on the hexagonal cell. The data are in excellent agreement with a spin- 1 2 Hamiltonian that includes antiferromagnetic nearest-neighbor intrachain coupling J c=10.6(1) meV, ferromagnetic interchain coupling J ab=₋1.2 (1) meV, and exchange anisotropy ΔJ c=0.14(1) meV. We calculated the sublattice magnetization to be strongly reduced, ~0.39μ B. This appears compatible with a reduced Néel temperature, T N=14.5K
Dynamics of antiferromagnetic skyrmion driven by the spin Hall effect
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jin, Chendong; Song, Chengkun; Wang, Jianbo; Liu, Qingfang
2016-10-01
Magnetic skyrmion moved by the spin-Hall effect is promising for the application of the generation racetrack memories. However, the Magnus force causes a deflected motion of skyrmion, which limits its application. Here, we create an antiferromagnetic skyrmion by injecting a spin-polarized pulse in the nanostripe and investigate the spin Hall effect-induced motion of antiferromagnetic skyrmion by micromagnetic simulations. In contrast to ferromagnetic skyrmion, we find that the antiferromagnetic skyrmion has three evident advantages: (i) the minimum driving current density of antiferromagnetic skyrmion is about two orders smaller than the ferromagnetic skyrmion; (ii) the velocity of the antiferromagnetic skyrmion is about 57 times larger than the ferromagnetic skyrmion driven by the same value of current density; (iii) antiferromagnetic skyrmion can be driven by the spin Hall effect without the influence of Magnus force. In addition, antiferromagnetic skyrmion can move around the pinning sites due to its property of topological protection. Our results present the understanding of antiferromagnetic skyrmion motion driven by the spin Hall effect and may also contribute to the development of antiferromagnetic skyrmion-based racetrack memories.
Chow, Chun Y; Bolvin, Hélène; Campbell, Victoria E; Guillot, Régis; Kampf, Jeff W; Wernsdorfer, Wolfgang; Gendron, Frédéric; Autschbach, Jochen; Pecoraro, Vincent L; Mallah, Talal
2015-07-01
We report here the synthesis and the investigation of the magnetic properties of a series of binuclear lanthanide complexes belonging to the metallacrown family. The isostructural complexes have a core structure with the general formula [Ga 4 Ln 2 (shi 3- ) 4 (Hshi 2- ) 2 (H 2 shi - ) 2 (C 5 H 5 N) 4 (CH 3 OH) x (H 2 O) x ]· x C 5 H 5 N· x CH 3 OH· x H 2 O (where H 3 shi = salicylhydroxamic acid and Ln = Gd III 1 ; Tb III 2 ; Dy III 3 ; Er III 4 ; Y III 5 ; Y III 0.9 Dy III 0.1 6 ). Apart from the Er-containing complex, all complexes exhibit an antiferromagnetic exchange coupling leading to a diamagnetic ground state. Magnetic studies, below 2 K, on a single crystal of 3 using a micro-squid array reveal an opening of the magnetic hysteresis cycle at zero field. The dynamic susceptibility studies of 3 and of the diluted DyY 6 complexes reveal the presence of two relaxation processes for 3 that are due to the excited ferromagnetic state and to the uncoupled Dy III ions. The antiferromagnetic coupling in 3 was shown to be mainly due to an exchange mechanism, which accounts for about 2/3 of the energy gap between the antiferro- and the ferromagnetic states. The overlap integrals between the Natural Spin Orbitals (NSOs) of the mononuclear fragments, which are related to the magnitude of the antiferromagnetic exchange, are one order of magnitude larger for the Dy 2 than for the Er 2 complex.
Spin diffusion and torques in disordered antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Manchon, Aurelien
2017-03-01
We have developed a drift-diffusion equation of spin transport in collinear bipartite metallic antiferromagnets. Starting from a model tight-binding Hamiltonian, we obtain the quantum kinetic equation within Keldysh formalism and expand it to the lowest order in spatial gradient using Wigner expansion method. In the diffusive limit, these equations track the spatio-temporal evolution of the spin accumulations and spin currents on each sublattice of the antiferromagnet. We use these equations to address the nature of the spin transfer torque in (i) a spin-valve composed of a ferromagnet and an antiferromagnet, (ii) a metallic bilayer consisting of an antiferromagnet adjacent to a heavy metal possessing spin Hall effect, and in (iii) a single antiferromagnet possessing spin Hall effect. We show that the latter can experience a self-torque thanks to the non-vanishing spin Hall effect in the antiferromagnet.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
de P. R. Moreira, Ibério; Dovesi, Roberto; Roetti, Carla; Saunders, Victor R.; Orlando, Roberto
2000-09-01
The ab initio periodic unrestricted Hartree-Fock method has been applied in the investigation of the ground-state structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of the rutile-type compounds MF2 (M=Mn, Fe, Co, and Ni). All electron Gaussian basis sets have been used. The systems turn out to be large band-gap antiferromagnetic insulators; the optimized geometrical parameters are in good agreement with experiment. The calculated most stable electronic state shows an antiferromagnetic order in agreement with that resulting from neutron scattering experiments. The magnetic coupling constants between nearest-neighbor magnetic ions along the [001], [111], and [100] (or [010]) directions have been calculated using several supercells. The resulting ab initio magnetic coupling constants are reasonably satisfactory when compared with available experimental data. The importance of the Jahn-Teller effect in FeF2 and CoF2 is also discussed.
Structure, strain, and control of ground state property in LaTiO3/LaAlO3 superlattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Alex Taekyung; Han, Myung Joon
2014-03-01
We examined the ground state property of LaTiO3/LaAlO3 superlattice through density functional band calculations. Total energy calculations, including the structural distortions, U dependence, and the exchange correlation functional dependence, clearly showed that the spin and orbital ground state can be controlled systematically by the epitaxial strain. In the wide range of strain, the ferromagnetic-spin and antiferro-orbital order are stabilized, which is notably different from the previously reported ground state in the titanate systems. By applying +2.8% of tensile strains, we showed that the antiferromagnetic-spin and ferro-orbital ordered phase become stabilized.
Magnetic phase diagram and critical behavior of electron-doped LaxCa1-xMnO3(0⩽x⩽0.25) nanoparticles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Yang; Fan, Hong Jin
2011-06-01
A comparative study of electron-doped perovskite manganites LaxCa1-xMnO3 (0 ⩽ x ⩽ 0.25) in nanoparticle and bulk form is reported. The bulks and nanoparticles exhibit different magnetic evolutions. Overall with increasing x, the bulks have a phase-separated ground state with ferromagnetic (FM) clusters and antiferromagnetic (AFM) matrix coexisting. The FM clusters gradually grow, and the magnetization M peaks at x= 0.1. Subsequently, charge-ordering (CO) or local CO occurs, which suppresses the increase in FM clusters but favors the development of antiferromagnetism so M starts to decrease. Finally the system becomes a homogeneous AFM state at x > 0.18. For the nanoparticles in the range of 0 ⩽ x ⩽ 0.1, the ground state is similar to that of the bulks, but M is slightly increased because of a surface ferromagnetism. Nevertheless because of the structure distortion induced by surface pressure and the size effect, CO does not occur in the nanoparticles. Consequently, the ferromagnetism still gradually develops at x > 0.1 and thus M monotonously rises. M reaches a maximum at x= 0.18, after which the competition between ferromagnetism and antiferromagnetism induces a cluster-glass (CG) state. On the basis of these observations the phase diagrams for both bulks and nanoparticles are established. For the nanoparticles that display enhanced ferromagnetism the critical behavior analysis indicates that they fall into a three-dimensional (3D) Heisenberg ferromagnet class.
Antiferromagnetic resonance excited by oscillating electric currents
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sluka, Volker
2017-12-01
In antiferromagnetic materials the order parameter exhibits resonant modes at frequencies that can be in the terahertz range, making them interesting components for spintronic devices. Here, it is shown that antiferromagnetic resonance can be excited using the inverse spin-Hall effect in a system consisting of an antiferromagnetic insulator coupled to a normal-metal waveguide. The time-dependent interplay between spin torque, ac spin accumulation, and magnetic degrees of freedom is studied. It is found that the dynamics of the antiferromagnet affects the frequency-dependent conductivity of the normal metal. Further, a comparison is made between spin-current-induced and Oersted-field-induced excitation under the condition of constant power injection.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hao, Lin; Meyers, D.; Frederick, Clayton; Fabbris, Gilberto; Yang, Junyi; Traynor, Nathan; Horak, Lukas; Kriegner, Dominik; Choi, Yongseong; Kim, Jong-Woo; Haskel, Daniel; Ryan, Phil J.; Dean, M. P. M.; Liu, Jian
2017-07-01
We report an experimental investigation of the two-dimensional Jeff=1 /2 antiferromagnetic Mott insulator by varying the interlayer exchange coupling in [(SrIrO3)1 , (SrTiO3)m ] (m =1 , 2 and 3) superlattices. Although all samples exhibited an insulating ground state with long-range magnetic order, temperature-dependent resistivity measurements showed a stronger insulating behavior in the m =2 and m =3 samples than the m =1 sample which displayed a clear kink at the magnetic transition. This difference indicates that the blocking effect of the excessive SrTiO3 layer enhances the effective electron-electron correlation and strengthens the Mott phase. The significant reduction of the Néel temperature from 150 K for m =1 to 40 K for m =2 demonstrates that the long-range order stability in the former is boosted by a substantial interlayer exchange coupling. Resonant x-ray magnetic scattering revealed that the interlayer exchange coupling has a switchable sign, depending on the SrTiO3 layer number m , for maintaining canting-induced weak ferromagnetism. The nearly unaltered transition temperature between the m =2 and the m =3 demonstrated that we have realized a two-dimensional antiferromagnet at finite temperatures with diminishing interlayer exchange coupling.
Antiferromagnetic instability in Sr3Ru2O7: stabilized and revealed by dilute Mn impurities
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hossain, Muhammed; Bohnenbuck, B.; Chuang, Y.-D.; Cruz, E.; Wu, H.-H.; Tjeng, L. H.; Elfimov, I. S.; Hussain, Z.; Keimer, B.; Sawatzky, G. A.; Damascelli, A.
2009-03-01
X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) and Resonant Elastic Soft X-ray Scattering (RESXS) studies have been performed on Mn-doped Sr3Ru2O7, both on the Ru and Mn L-edges, to investigate the origin of the metal insulator transition. Extensive simulations based on our experimental findings point toward an intrinsic antiferromagnetic instability in the parent Sr3Ru2O7 compound that is stabilized by the dilute Mn impurities. We show that the metal-insulator transition is a direct consequence of the antiferromagnetic order and we propose a phenomenological model that may be applicable also to metal-insulator transitions seen in other oxides. Moreover, a comparison of Ru and Mn L-edge data on 5% Mn doped system reveals that dilute Mn impurities are generating much more intense signal than Ru which is occupying 95% of the lattice sites. This suggests the embedding of dilute impurities as a powerful mean to probe weak and, possibly, spatially inhomogeneous order in solid-state systems. In collaboration with: Y. Yoshida (AIST), J. Geck, D.G. Hawthorn (UBC), M.W. Haverkort, Z. Hu, C. Sch"ußler-Langeheine (Cologne), R. Mathieu, Y. Tokura, S. Satow, H. Takagi (Tokyo), J.D. Denlinger (ALS).
Declining availability of outdoor skating in Canada
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Brammer, Jeremy R.; Samson, Jason; Humphries, Murray M.
2015-01-01
We find a mixed chirality $d$-wave superconducting state in the coexistence region between antiferromagnetism and interaction-driven superconductivity in lightly doped honeycomb materials. This state has a topological chiral $d+id$-wave symmetry in one Dirac valley but $d-id$-wave symmetry in the other valley and hosts two counter-propagating edge states, protected in the absence of intervalley scattering. A first-order topological phase transition, with no bulk gap closing, separates the chiral $d$-wave state at small magnetic moments from the mixed chirality $d$-wave phase.
Raman scattering study on the hidden order and antiferromagnetic phases in URu2-xFexSi2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kung, Hsiang-Hsi; Ran, Sheng; Kanchanavatee, Noravee; Lee, Alexander; Krapivin, Viktor; Haule, Kristjan; Maple, M. Brian; Blumberg, Girsh
The heavy fermion compound URu2Si2 possesses an unusual ground state known as the ``hidden order'' (HO) phase below T = 17 . 5 K, which evolves into an large moment antiferromagnetic (LMAFM) phase under pressure. A recent Raman scattering study shows that an A2 g symmetry (D4 h) in-gap mode emerges in the HO phase, characterizing the excitation from a chirality density wave. Here, we report Raman scattering results for single crystal URu2-xFexSi2 with x <= 0 . 2 , where the Fe substitution acts as chemical pressure, shifting the system's ground state from HO to LMAFM. We found that the A2 g mode softens with doping, vanishes at the HO and LMAFM phase boundary, then re-emerges and hardens with doping in the LMAFM phase. The relations between the A2 g mode energy and the strength of the HO/LMAFM order parameters will be discussed in this talk. GB and HHK acknowledge support from DOE BES Award DE-SC0005463. AL and VK acknowledge NSF Award DMR-1104884. KH acknowledges NSF Award DMR-1405303. MBM, SR and NK acknowledge DOE BES Award DE-FG02-04ER46105 and NSF Award DMR 1206553.
μ SR studies of the extended kagome systems YBaCo4O7+δ (δ = 0 and 0.1)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Suheon; Lee, Wonjun; Mitchell, John; Choi, Kwang-Yong
We present a μSR study of the extended kagome systems YBaCo4O7+δ (δ = 0 and 0.1), which are made up of an alternating stacking of triangular and kagome layers. The parent material YBaCo4O7.0 undergoes a structural phase transition at 310 K, releasing geometrical frustration and thereby stabilizing an antiferromagnetically ordered state below TN = 106 K. The μSR spectra of YBaCo4O7.0 exhibit the loss of initial asymmetry and the development of a fast relaxation component below TN = 111 K. This indicates that the Co spins in the kagome planes remain in an inhomogeneous and dynamically fluctuating state down to 4 K, while the triangular spins order antiferromagnetically below TN. The nonstoichiometric YBaCo4O7.1 compound with no magnetic ordering exhibits a disparate spin dynamics between the fast cooling (10 K/min) and slow cooling (1 K/min) procedures. While the fast-cooled μSR spectra show a simple exponential decay, the slow-cooled spectra are described with a sum of a simple exponential function and a stretched exponential function. These are in agreements with the occurrence of the phase separation between interstitial oxygen-rich and poor regions in the slow-cooling measurements.
Howald, Ludovic; Stilp, Evelyn; de Réotier, Pierre Dalmas; Yaouanc, Alain; Raymond, Stéphane; Piamonteze, Cinthia; Lapertot, Gérard; Baines, Christopher; Keller, Hugo
2015-01-01
In the generic phase diagram of heavy fermion systems, tuning an external parameter such as hydrostatic or chemical pressure modifies the superconducting transition temperature. The superconducting phase forms a dome in the temperature—tuning parameter phase diagram, which is associated with a maximum of the superconducting pairing interaction. Proximity to antiferromagnetism suggests a relation between the disappearance of antiferromagnetic order and superconductivity. We combine muon spin rotation, neutron scattering, and x-ray absorption spectroscopy techniques to gain access to the magnetic and electronic structure of CeCo(In1−xCdx)5 at different time scales. Different magnetic structures are obtained that indicate a magnetic order of itinerant character, coexisting with bulk superconductivity. The suppression of the antiferromagnetic order appears to be driven by a modification of the bandwidth/carrier concentration, implying that the electronic structure and consequently the interplay of superconductivity and magnetism is strongly affected by hydrostatic and chemical pressure. PMID:26224422
Electric-field control of local ferromagnetism using a magnetoelectric multiferroic.
Chu, Ying-Hao; Martin, Lane W; Holcomb, Mikel B; Gajek, Martin; Han, Shu-Jen; He, Qing; Balke, Nina; Yang, Chan-Ho; Lee, Donkoun; Hu, Wei; Zhan, Qian; Yang, Pei-Ling; Fraile-Rodríguez, Arantxa; Scholl, Andreas; Wang, Shan X; Ramesh, R
2008-06-01
Multiferroics are of interest for memory and logic device applications, as the coupling between ferroelectric and magnetic properties enables the dynamic interaction between these order parameters. Here, we report an approach to control and switch local ferromagnetism with an electric field using multiferroics. We use two types of electromagnetic coupling phenomenon that are manifested in heterostructures consisting of a ferromagnet in intimate contact with the multiferroic BiFeO(3). The first is an internal, magnetoelectric coupling between antiferromagnetism and ferroelectricity in the BiFeO(3) film that leads to electric-field control of the antiferromagnetic order. The second is based on exchange interactions at the interface between a ferromagnet (Co(0.9)Fe(0.1)) and the antiferromagnet. We have discovered a one-to-one mapping of the ferroelectric and ferromagnetic domains, mediated by the colinear coupling between the magnetization in the ferromagnet and the projection of the antiferromagnetic order in the multiferroic. Our preliminary experiments reveal the possibility to locally control ferromagnetism with an electric field.
Electric-field control of local ferromagnetism using a magnetoelectric multiferroic
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chu, Ying-Hao; Martin, Lane W.; Holcomb, Mikel B.; Gajek, Martin; Han, Shu-Jen; He, Qing; Balke, Nina; Yang, Chan-Ho; Lee, Donkoun; Hu, Wei; Zhan, Qian; Yang, Pei-Ling; Fraile-Rodríguez, Arantxa; Scholl, Andreas; Wang, Shan X.; Ramesh, R.
2008-06-01
Multiferroics are of interest for memory and logic device applications, as the coupling between ferroelectric and magnetic properties enables the dynamic interaction between these order parameters. Here, we report an approach to control and switch local ferromagnetism with an electric field using multiferroics. We use two types of electromagnetic coupling phenomenon that are manifested in heterostructures consisting of a ferromagnet in intimate contact with the multiferroic BiFeO3. The first is an internal, magnetoelectric coupling between antiferromagnetism and ferroelectricity in the BiFeO3 film that leads to electric-field control of the antiferromagnetic order. The second is based on exchange interactions at the interface between a ferromagnet (Co0.9Fe0.1) and the antiferromagnet. We have discovered a one-to-one mapping of the ferroelectric and ferromagnetic domains, mediated by the colinear coupling between the magnetization in the ferromagnet and the projection of the antiferromagnetic order in the multiferroic. Our preliminary experiments reveal the possibility to locally control ferromagnetism with an electric field.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cui, Y.; Dai, J.; Zhou, P.; Wang, P. S.; Li, T. R.; Song, W. H.; Wang, J. C.; Ma, L.; Zhang, Z.; Li, S. Y.; Luke, G. M.; Normand, B.; Xiang, T.; Yu, W.
2018-04-01
Ba8CoNb6O24 presents a system whose Co2 + ions have an effective spin 1/2 and construct a regular triangular-lattice antiferromagnet (TLAFM) with a very large interlayer spacing, ensuring purely two-dimensional character. We exploit this ideal realization to perform a detailed experimental analysis of the S =1 /2 TLAFM, which is one of the keystone models in frustrated quantum magnetism. We find strong low-energy spin fluctuations and no magnetic ordering, but a diverging correlation length down to 0.1 K, indicating a Mermin-Wagner trend toward zero-temperature order. Below 0.1 K, however, our low-field measurements show an unexpected magnetically disordered state, which is a candidate quantum spin liquid. We establish the (H ,T ) phase diagram, mapping in detail the quantum fluctuation corrections to the available theoretical analysis. These include a strong upshift in field of the maximum ordering temperature, qualitative changes to both low- and high-field phase boundaries, and an ordered regime apparently dominated by the collinear "up-up-down" state. Ba8CoNb6O24 , therefore, offers fresh input for the development of theoretical approaches to the field-induced quantum phase transitions of the S =1 /2 Heisenberg TLAFM.
Two-component quantum Hall effects in topological flat bands
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zeng, Tian-Sheng; Zhu, Wei; Sheng, D. N.
2017-03-27
Here in this paper, we study quantum Hall states for two-component particles (hardcore bosons and fermions) loading in topological lattice models. By tuning the interplay of interspecies and intraspecies interactions, we demonstrate that two-component fractional quantum Hall states emerge at certain fractional filling factors ν = 1/2 for fermions (ν = 2/3 for bosons) in the lowest Chern band, classified by features from ground states including the unique Chern number matrix (inverse of the K matrix), the fractional charge and spin pumpings, and two parallel propagating edge modes. Moreover, we also apply our strategy to two-component fermions at integer fillingmore » factor ν = 2 , where a possible topological Neel antiferromagnetic phase is under intense debate very recently. For the typical π -flux checkerboard lattice, by tuning the onsite Hubbard repulsion, we establish a first-order phase transition directly from a two-component fermionic ν = 2 quantum Hall state at weak interaction to a topologically trivial antiferromagnetic insulator at strong interaction, and therefore exclude the possibility of an intermediate topological phase for our system.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Karľová, Katarína; Strečka, Jozef; Lyra, Marcelo L.
2018-03-01
The spin-1/2 Ising-Heisenberg pentagonal chain is investigated with use of the star-triangle transformation, which establishes a rigorous mapping equivalence with the effective spin-1/2 Ising zigzag ladder. The investigated model has a rich ground-state phase diagram including two spectacular quantum antiferromagnetic ground states with a fourfold broken symmetry. It is demonstrated that these long-period quantum ground states arise due to a competition between the effective next-nearest-neighbor and nearest-neighbor interactions of the corresponding spin-1/2 Ising zigzag ladder. The concurrence is used to quantify the bipartite entanglement between the nearest-neighbor Heisenberg spin pairs, which are quantum-mechanically entangled in two quantum ground states with or without spontaneously broken symmetry. The pair correlation functions between the nearest-neighbor Heisenberg spins as well as the next-nearest-neighbor and nearest-neighbor Ising spins were investigated with the aim to bring insight into how a relevant short-range order manifests itself at low enough temperatures. It is shown that the specific heat displays temperature dependencies with either one or two separate round maxima.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ramazanov, M. K.; Murtazaev, A. K.; Magomedov, M. A.; Badiev, M. K.
2018-06-01
We study phase transitions and thermodynamic properties in the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic Ising model with next-nearest-neighbor interaction on a Kagomé lattice by Monte Carlo simulations. A histogram data analysis shows that a second-order transition occurs in the model. From the analysis of obtained data, we can assume that next-nearest-neighbor ferromagnetic interactions in two-dimensional antiferromagnetic Ising model on a Kagomé lattice excite the occurrence of a second-order transition and unusual behavior of thermodynamic properties on the temperature dependence.
Real-space imaging of non-collinear antiferromagnetic order with a single-spin magnetometer
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gross, I.; Akhtar, W.; Garcia, V.; Martínez, L. J.; Chouaieb, S.; Garcia, K.; Carrétéro, C.; Barthélémy, A.; Appel, P.; Maletinsky, P.; Kim, J.-V.; Chauleau, J. Y.; Jaouen, N.; Viret, M.; Bibes, M.; Fusil, S.; Jacques, V.
2017-09-01
Although ferromagnets have many applications, their large magnetization and the resulting energy cost for switching magnetic moments bring into question their suitability for reliable low-power spintronic devices. Non-collinear antiferromagnetic systems do not suffer from this problem, and often have extra functionalities: non-collinear spin order may break space-inversion symmetry and thus allow electric-field control of magnetism, or may produce emergent spin-orbit effects that enable efficient spin-charge interconversion. To harness these traits for next-generation spintronics, the nanoscale control and imaging capabilities that are now routine for ferromagnets must be developed for antiferromagnetic systems. Here, using a non-invasive, scanning single-spin magnetometer based on a nitrogen-vacancy defect in diamond, we demonstrate real-space visualization of non-collinear antiferromagnetic order in a magnetic thin film at room temperature. We image the spin cycloid of a multiferroic bismuth ferrite (BiFeO3) thin film and extract a period of about 70 nanometres, consistent with values determined by macroscopic diffraction. In addition, we take advantage of the magnetoelectric coupling present in BiFeO3 to manipulate the cycloid propagation direction by an electric field. Besides highlighting the potential of nitrogen-vacancy magnetometry for imaging complex antiferromagnetic orders at the nanoscale, these results demonstrate how BiFeO3 can be used in the design of reconfigurable nanoscale spin textures.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yezli, M.; Bekhechi, S.; Hontinfinde, F.; EZ-Zahraouy, H.
2016-04-01
Two nonperturbative methods such as Monte-Carlo simulation (MC) and Transfer-Matrix Finite-Size-Scaling calculations (TMFSS) have been used to study the phase transition of the spin- 3 / 2 Blume-Emery-Griffiths model (BEG) with quadrupolar and antiferromagnetic next-nearest-neighbor exchange interactions. Ground state and finite temperature phase diagrams are obtained by means of these two methods. New degenerate phases are found and only second order phase transitions occur for all values of the parameter interactions. No sign of the intermediate phase is found from both methods. Critical exponents are also obtained from TMFSS calculations. Ising criticality and nonuniversal behaviors are observed depending on the strength of the second neighbor interaction.
Antiferromagnetic structure and electronic properties of BaCr2As2 and BaCrFeAs2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Filsinger, Kai A.; Schnelle, Walter; Adler, Peter; Fecher, Gerhard H.; Reehuis, Manfred; Hoser, Andreas; Hoffmann, Jens-Uwe; Werner, Peter; Greenblatt, Martha; Felser, Claudia
2017-05-01
Recent theoretical studies suggest that superconductivity may be found in doped chromium pnictides with crystal structures similar to their iron counterparts. Here, we report a comprehensive study on the magnetic arsenides BaCr2As2 and BaCrFeAs2 (space group I 4 /m m m ), which are possible mother compounds with d4 and d5 electron configurations, respectively. DFT-based calculations of the electronic structure evidence metallic antiferromagnetic ground states for both compounds. By powder neutron diffraction, we confirm for BaCr2As2 a robust ordering in the antiferromagnetic G -type structure at TN=580 K with μCr=1.9 μB . Anomalies in the lattice parameters point to magnetostructural coupling effects. In BaCrFeAs2, the Cr and Fe atoms randomly occupy the transition-metal site and G -type order is found below 265 K with μCr /Fe=1.1 μB . 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy demonstrates that only a small ordered moment is associated with the Fe atoms, in agreement with electronic structure calculations leading to μFe˜0 . The temperature dependence of the hyperfine field does not follow that of the total moments. Both compounds are metallic but show large enhancements of the linear specific heat. Electrical transport in BaCrFeAs2 is dominated by the atomic disorder and the partial magnetic disorder of Fe. Our results indicate that Néel-type order is unfavorable for Fe moments and thus it is destabilized with increasing Fe content.
A Spin-Canted Antiferromagnetic Ground State in CeRu2Al10
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dean, Philip; Muro, Yuji; Takabatake, Toshiro; Hatton, Peter D.
2018-01-01
Resonant polarised soft x-ray scattering at the cerium M-edge has been used to refine the magnetic structure of CeRu2Al10. A strong resonant feature at the cerium MIV-edge was observed at the disallowed (0,1,0) Bragg position, consistent with previous neutron diffraction refinement of the moment pointing along the c-axis. The magnetic peak was found to have a temperature dependence expected for the paramagnetic-antiferromagnetic transition, disappearing above around 30 K. The polarisation dependence of the scattered x-rays conclusively shows that the low-temperature antiferromagnetic structure is non-collinear in nature. Fitting the polarisation dependence of the obtained Stokes parameters was undertaken with models for canting along either the a-axis or the b-axis. The experimental data agrees better with the model involving canting towards the a-axis. However, this is inconsistent with the Cmcm space group, suggestive of a symmetry lowering to either Pmnm or Cm2m. The resulting model is then achieved with a 9.6° ± 1.1 canting of the moments towards the a-axis. No resonance features were observed at the ruthenium L-edges. This suggests that the ruthenium atoms play no part in the antiferromagnetic ordering.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chandra, Premala; Coleman, Piers; Flint, Rebecca
2012-02-01
The hidden order that develops below 17.5K in URu2Si2 has eluded identification for twenty-five years. Here we show that the recent observation of Ising quasiparticles in URu2Si2 suggests a novel ``hastatic order'' (Latin:spear),with a two-component order parameter describing hybridization between electrons and the Ising 5f^2 states of the uranium atoms. Hastatic order breaks time-reversal symmetry by mixing states of different Kramers parity; this accounts for the magnetic anomalies observed in torque magnetometry and the pseudo-Goldstone mode observed in neutron scattering. Hastatic order is predicted to induce a basal-plane magnetic moment of order 0.01μB, a gap to longitudinal spin fluctuations that vanishes continuously at the first-order antiferromagnetic transition and a narrow resonant nematic feature in the scanning tunneling spectra.
Quantum entanglement and criticality of the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model in an external field.
Liu, Guang-Hua; Li, Ruo-Yan; Tian, Guang-Shan
2012-06-27
By Lanczos exact diagonalization and the infinite time-evolving block decimation (iTEBD) technique, the two-site entanglement as well as the bipartite entanglement, the ground state energy, the nearest-neighbor correlations, and the magnetization in the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg (AFH) model under an external field are investigated. With increasing external field, the small size system shows some distinct upward magnetization stairsteps, accompanied synchronously with some downward two-site entanglement stairsteps. In the thermodynamic limit, the two-site entanglement, as well as the bipartite entanglement, the ground state energy, the nearest-neighbor correlations, and the magnetization are calculated, and the critical magnetic field h(c) = 2.0 is determined exactly. Our numerical results show that the quantum entanglement is sensitive to the subtle changing of the ground state, and can be used to describe the magnetization and quantum phase transition. Based on the discontinuous behavior of the first-order derivative of the entanglement entropy and fidelity per site, we think that the quantum phase transition in this model should belong to the second-order category. Furthermore, in the magnon existence region (h < 2.0), a logarithmically divergent behavior of block entanglement which can be described by a free bosonic field theory is observed, and the central charge c is determined to be 1.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lei, Shiming; Chikara, Shalinee; Puggioni, Danilo; Ke, Xianglin; Mao, Z. Q.; Rondinelli, J. M.; Jaime, Marcelo; Singleton, John; Zapf, Vivien; Gopalan, Venkatraman
Ca3Ru2O7 undergoes a second-order magnetic phase transition to AFM-a (ferromagnetic bilayers antiferromagnetically stack along c-axis with magnetic easy axis along a) at TN = 56 K, followed by a concomitant first-order structural and magnetic phase transition to an AFM-b (antiferromagnetic with magnetic easy axis along b) at TS = 48 K. For T<30 K, a quasi-two-dimensional (2D) metallic state exists due to the survival of small non-nested Fermi pockets. With a proper magnetic field applied along b-axis, an additional phase of canted-AFM is induced. Here we propose a new strategy to tune the polar metal Ca3Ru2O7 into insulating state by chemical doping. In the meantime, the superexchange interaction is significantly weakened to allow the existence of a weak ferromagnetic state. Combined with its robust polar nature, we offer an experimental demonstration of a new multiferroic material. The mechanism is further discussed in the framework of hybrid improper ferroelectricity proposed by Benedek and Fennie. This new strategy proposed here may be utilized as a general approach for new multiferroics starting from a material on the verge of the Mott insulating. Here we will discuss our comprehensive magnetization and magnetostriction, and magnetic field dependent SHG study on this material
Effects of size, shape, and frequency on the antiferromagnetic resonance linewidth of MnF
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Obrien, K. C.
1973-01-01
The research concerning the properties and application of solid state materials at submillimeter frequencies is summarized. Work reported includes: far infrared Fourier spectroscopy; studies of the antiferromagnetic resonance line in MnF2 at millimeter wavelengths; numerical solution of the equations of motion of a general two-sublattice antiferromagnet; study of antiferromagnetic resonance line in NiO powder; and resonance investigations of several indium thisospinels at millimeter wavelengths.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Zhang, Qiang; Ye, Feng; Tian, Wei
Bilayered Sr 3Ru 2O 7 is an unusual metamagnetic metal with inherently antiferromagnetic (AFM) and ferromagnetic (FM) fluctuations. Partial substitution of Ru by Mn results in the establishment of a metal-insulator transition (MIT) at TMIT and AFM ordering at TM in Sr 3(Ru 1-xMn x) 2O 7. Using elastic neutron scattering, we investigated the effect of Mn doping on the magnetic structure, in-plane magnetic correlation lengths and their correlation to the MIT in Sr 3(Ru 1-xMn x) 2O 7 (x=0.06 and 0.12). With the increase of Mn doping (x) from 0.06 to 0.12 or the decrease of temperatures for x=0.12,more » an evolution from an in-plane short-range to long-range antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground state occurs. For both compounds, the magnetic ordering has a double-stripe configuration, and the onset of magnetic correlation with an anisotropic behavior coincides with the sharp rise in electrical resistivity and specific heat. Since it does not induce a measurable lattice distortion, the double-stripe antiferromagnetic order with anisotropic spin texture breaks symmetry from a C 4v crystal lattice to a C 2v magnetic sublattice. These observations shed light on an age-old question regarding the Slater versus Mott-type MIT.« less
Zhang, Qiang; Ye, Feng; Tian, Wei; ...
2017-06-12
Bilayered Sr 3Ru 2O 7 is an unusual metamagnetic metal with inherently antiferromagnetic (AFM) and ferromagnetic (FM) fluctuations. Partial substitution of Ru by Mn results in the establishment of a metal-insulator transition (MIT) at TMIT and AFM ordering at TM in Sr 3(Ru 1-xMn x) 2O 7. Using elastic neutron scattering, we investigated the effect of Mn doping on the magnetic structure, in-plane magnetic correlation lengths and their correlation to the MIT in Sr 3(Ru 1-xMn x) 2O 7 (x=0.06 and 0.12). With the increase of Mn doping (x) from 0.06 to 0.12 or the decrease of temperatures for x=0.12,more » an evolution from an in-plane short-range to long-range antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground state occurs. For both compounds, the magnetic ordering has a double-stripe configuration, and the onset of magnetic correlation with an anisotropic behavior coincides with the sharp rise in electrical resistivity and specific heat. Since it does not induce a measurable lattice distortion, the double-stripe antiferromagnetic order with anisotropic spin texture breaks symmetry from a C 4v crystal lattice to a C 2v magnetic sublattice. These observations shed light on an age-old question regarding the Slater versus Mott-type MIT.« less
Itinerant Antiferromagnetism in RuO 2
Berlijn, Tom; Snijders, Paul C.; Delaire, Oliver A.; ...
2017-02-15
Bulk rutile RuO 2 has long been considered a Pauli paramagnet. Here, in this article, we report that RuO 2 exhibits a hitherto undetected lattice distortion below approximately 900 K. The distortion is accompanied by antiferromagnetic order up to at least 300 K with a small room temperature magnetic moment of approximately 0.05μ B as evidenced by polarized neutron diffraction. Density functional theory plus U(DFT+U) calculations indicate that antiferromagnetism is favored even for small values of the Hubbard U of the order of 1 eV. The antiferromagnetism may be traced to a Fermi surface instability, lifting the band degeneracy imposedmore » by the rutile crystal field. The combination of high Néel temperature and small itinerant moments make RuO 2 unique among ruthenate compounds and among oxide materials in general.« less
Polarized neutron scattering study of the multiple order parameter system NdB4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Metoki, N.; Yamauchi, H.; Matsuda, M.; Fernandez-Baca, J. A.; Watanuki, R.; Hagihala, M.
2018-05-01
Neutron polarization analysis has been carried out in order to clarify the magnetic structures of multiple order parameter f -electron system NdB4. We confirmed the noncollinear "all-in all-out" structure (Γ4) of the in-plane moment, which is in good agreement with our previous neutron powder diffraction study. We found that the magnetic moment along the c -axis mc showed diagonally antiferromagnetic structure (Γ10), inconsistent with previously reported "vortex" structure (Γ2). The microscopic mixture of these two structures with q⃗0=(0 ,0 ,0 ) appears in phase II and remains stable in phases III and IV, where an incommensurate modulation coexists. The unusual magnetic ordering is phenomenologically understood via Landau theory with the primary order parameter Γ4 coupled with higher-order secondary order parameter Γ10. The magnetic moments were estimated to be 1.8 ±0.2 and 0.2 ±0.05 μB at T =7.5 K for Γ4 and Γ10, respectively. We also found a long-period incommensurate modulation of the q⃗1=(0 ,0 ,1 /2 ) antiferromagnetic structure of mc with the propagation q⃗s 1=(0.14 ,0.14 ,0.1 ) and q⃗s 2=(0.2 ,0 ,0.1 ) in phase III and IV, respectively. The amplitude of sinusoidal modulation was about mc=1.0 ±0.2 μB at T =1.5 K. The local (0 ,0 ,1 /2 ) structure consists of in-plane ferromagnetic and out-of-plane antiferromagnetic coupling of mc, opposite to the coexisting Γ10. The mc of Γ10 is significantly enhanced up to 0.6 μB at T =1.5 K, which is accompanied by the incommensurate modulations. The Landau phenomenological approach indicates that the higher-order magnetic and/or multipole interactions based on the pseudoquartet f -electron state play important roles.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rousochatzakis, Ioannis; Richter, Johannes; Zinke, Ronald; Tsirlin, Alexander A.
2015-01-01
We investigate the antiferromagnetic canting instability of the spin-1/2 kagome ferromagnet, as realized in the layered cuprates Cu3Bi (SeO3)2 O2X (X = Br , Cl ). While the local canting can be explained in terms of competing exchange interactions, the direction of the ferrimagnetic order parameter fluctuates strongly even at short distances on account of frustration which gives rise to an infinite ground state degeneracy at the classical level. In analogy with the kagome antiferromagnet, the accidental degeneracy is fully lifted only by nonlinear 1 /S corrections, rendering the selected uniform canted phase very fragile even for spins-1/2, as shown explicitly by coupled-cluster calculations. To account for the observed ordering, we show that the minimal description of these systems must include the microscopic Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya interactions, which we obtain from density-functional band-structure calculations. The model explains all qualitative properties of the kagome francisites, including the detailed nature of the ground state and the anisotropic response under a magnetic field. The predicted magnon excitation spectrum and quantitative features of the magnetization process call for further experimental investigations of these compounds.
Electronic polymers and soft-matter-like broken symmetries in underdoped cuprates.
Capati, M; Caprara, S; Di Castro, C; Grilli, M; Seibold, G; Lorenzana, J
2015-07-06
Empirical evidence in heavy fermion, pnictide and other systems suggests that unconventional superconductivity appears associated to some form of real-space electronic order. For the cuprates, despite several proposals, the emergence of order in the phase diagram between the commensurate antiferromagnetic state and the superconducting state is not well understood. Here we show that in this regime doped holes assemble in 'electronic polymers'. Within a Monte Carlo study, we find that in clean systems by lowering the temperature the polymer melt condenses first in a smectic state and then in a Wigner crystal both with the addition of inversion symmetry breaking. Disorder blurs the positional order leaving a robust inversion symmetry breaking and a nematic order, accompanied by vector chiral spin order and with the persistence of a thermodynamic transition. Such electronic phases, whose properties are reminiscent of soft-matter physics, produce charge and spin responses in good accord with experiments.
A Polar Corundum Oxide Displaying Weak Ferromagnetism at Room Temperature
2012-01-01
Combining long-range magnetic order with polarity in the same structure is a prerequisite for the design of (magnetoelectric) multiferroic materials. There are now several demonstrated strategies to achieve this goal, but retaining magnetic order above room temperature remains a difficult target. Iron oxides in the +3 oxidation state have high magnetic ordering temperatures due to the size of the coupled moments. Here we prepare and characterize ScFeO3 (SFO), which under pressure and in strain-stabilized thin films adopts a polar variant of the corundum structure, one of the archetypal binary oxide structures. Polar corundum ScFeO3 has a weak ferromagnetic ground state below 356 K—this is in contrast to the purely antiferromagnetic ground state adopted by the well-studied ferroelectric BiFeO3. PMID:22280499
Spin waves and magnetic exchange interactions in the spin-ladder compound RbFe 2 Se 3
Wang, Meng; Yi, Ming; Jin, Shangjian; ...
2016-07-20
In this paper, we report an inelastic neutron scattering study of the spin waves of the one-dimensional antiferromagnetic spin ladder compound RbFe 2Se 3. The results reveal that the products, SJ's, of the spin S and the magnetic exchange interaction J along the antiferromagnetic (leg) direction and the ferromagnetic (rung) direction are comparable with those for the stripe ordered phase of the parent compounds of the iron-based superconductors. Also, the universality of the SJ's implies nearly universal spin wave dynamics and the irrelevance of the fermiology for the existence of the stripe antiferromagnetic order among various Fe-based materials.
Antiferromagnetic interaction between A'-site Mn spins in A-site-ordered perovskite YMn3Al4O12.
Tohyama, Takenori; Saito, Takashi; Mizumaki, Masaichiro; Agui, Akane; Shimakawa, Yuichi
2010-03-01
The A-site-ordered perovskite YMn(3)Al(4)O(12) was prepared by high-pressure synthesis. Structural analysis with synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction data and the Mn L-edges X-ray absorption spectrum revealed that the compound has a chemical composition Y(3+)Mn(3+)(3)Al(3+)(4)O(2-)(12) with magnetic Mn(3+) at the A' site and non-magnetic Al(3+) at the B site. An antiferromagnetic interaction between the A'-site Mn(3+) spins is induced by the nearest neighboring Mn-Mn direct exchange interaction and causes an antiferromagnetic transition at 34.3 K.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Žukovič, M.; Borovský, M.; Bobák, A.
2018-05-01
We study a stacked triangular lattice Ising model with both intra- and inter-plane antiferromagnetic interactions in a field, by Monte Carlo simulation. We find only one phase transition from a paramagnetic to a partially disordered phase, which is of second order and 3D XY universality class. At low temperatures we identify two highly degenerate phases: at smaller (larger) fields the system shows long-range ordering in the stacking direction (within planes) but not in the planes (stacking direction). Nevertheless, crossovers to these phases do not have a character of conventional phase transitions but rather linear-chain-like excitations.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Geibel, C.; Schank, C.; Jährling, F.; Buschinger, B.; Grauel, A.; Lühmann, T.; Gegenwart, P.; Helfrich, R.; Reinders, P. H. P.; Steglich, F.
1994-04-01
We present first results of a doping study on the U site on UPd 2Al 3. These results give further support for a tetravalent uranium configuration and an induced type of antiferromagnetic ordering. They confirm the importance of an unperturbed electronic configuration for both antiferromagnetic long-range ordering and heavy-fermion superconductivity. Implications for the interaction between both phenomena are discussed.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bhattacharjee, N.; Sapozhnik, A. A.; Bodnar, S. Yu.; Grigorev, V. Yu.; Agustsson, S. Y.; Cao, J.; Dominko, D.; Obergfell, M.; Gomonay, O.; Sinova, J.; Kläui, M.; Elmers, H.-J.; Jourdan, M.; Demsar, J.
2018-06-01
We observe the excitation of collective modes in the terahertz (THz) range driven by the recently discovered Néel spin-orbit torques (NSOTs) in the metallic antiferromagnet Mn2Au . Temperature-dependent THz spectroscopy reveals a strong absorption mode centered near 1 THz, which upon heating from 4 to 450 K softens and loses intensity. A comparison with the estimated eigenmode frequencies implies that the observed mode is an in-plane antiferromagnetic resonance (AFMR). The AFMR absorption strength exceeds those found in antiferromagnetic insulators, driven by the magnetic field of the THz radiation, by 3 orders of magnitude. Based on this and the agreement with our theory modeling, we infer that the driving mechanism for the observed mode is the current-induced NSOT. Here the electric field component of the THz pulse drives an ac current in the metal, which subsequently drives the AFMR. This electric manipulation of the Néel order parameter at high frequencies makes Mn2Au a prime candidate for antiferromagnetic ultrafast memory applications.
First-Order Antiferromagnetic Transition and Fermi Surfaces in Semimetal EuSn3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mori, Akinobu; Miura, Yasunao; Tsutsumi, Hiroki; Mitamura, Katsuya; Hagiwara, Masayuki; Sugiyama, Kiyohiro; Hirose, Yusuke; Honda, Fuminori; Takeuchi, Tetsuya; Nakamura, Ai; Hiranaka, Yuichi; Hedo, Masato; Nakama, Takao; Ōnuki, Yoshichika
2014-02-01
We grew high-quality single crystals of the antiferromagnet EuSn3 with the AuCu3-type cubic crystal structure by the Sn self-flux method and measured the electrical resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, high-field magnetization, specific heat, thermal expansion, and de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) effect, in order to study the magnetic and Fermi surface properties. We observed steplike changes in the electrical resistivity and magnetic susceptibility, and a sharp peak of the specific heat and thermal expansion coefficient at a Néel temperature TN = 36.4 K. The first-order nature of the antiferromagnetic transition was ascertained by the observation of thermal hysteresis as well as of latent heat at TN. The present antiferromagnetic transition is found to be not a typical second-order phase transition but a first-order one. From the results of dHvA experiment, we clarified that the Fermi surface is very similar to that of the divalent compound YbSn3, mainly consisting of a nearly spherical hole Fermi surface and eight ellipsoidal electron Fermi surfaces. EuSn3 is possibly a compensated metal, and the occupation of a nearly spherical hole Fermi surface is 3.5% in its Brillouin zone, indicating that EuSn3 is a semimetal.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Srivastava, P.; Chaudhary, S.; Maurya, V.; Saha, J.; Kaushik, S. D.; Siruguri, V.; Patnaik, S.
2018-05-01
Synthesis and extensive structural, pyroelectric, magnetic, dielectric and magneto-electric characterizations are reported for polycrystalline Co4Nb2O9 towards unraveling the multiferroic ground state. Magnetic measurements confirm that Co4Nb2O9 becomes an anti-ferromagnet at around 28 K. Associated with the magnetic phase transition, a sharp peak in pyroelectric current indicates the appearance of strong magneto-electric coupling below Neel temperature (TN) along with large coupling constant upto 17.8 μC/m2T. Using temperature oscillation technique, we establish Co4Nb2O9 to be a genuine multiferroic with spontaneous electric polarization in the anti-ferromagnetic state in the absence of magnetic field poling. This is in agreement with our low temperature neutron diffraction studies that show the magnetic structure of Co4Nb2O9 to be that of a non-collinear anti-ferromagnet with ferroelectric ground state.
Frustrated Magnetism in Low-Dimensional Lattices
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tovar, Mayra
2011-12-01
In this dissertation we present the results of a theoretical investigation of spin models on two-dimensional and quasi one-dimensional lattices, all unified under the concept of quantum frustrated antiferromagnetism, and all discussing various aspects of the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the kagome lattice. In the Introduction (Chapter 1), we discuss at some length such concepts as frustration and superexchange, among others, which are of common relevance in the rest of the chapters. In Chapter 2, we study the effect of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya (DM) interactions on the zero-temperature magnetic susceptibility of systems whose low energy can be described by short-range valence bond states. Our work shows that this treatment is consistent with the experimentally observed non-vanishing susceptibility---in the specified temperature limit---of the spin-1/2 kagome antiferromagnetic compound ZnCu3(OH)6Cl2, also known as herbertsmithite. Although the objective of this work is explaining the aforementioned characteristic of the experimental system, our methods are more general and we apply them to the checkerboard and Shastry-Sutherland lattices as well. In Chapter 3, we discuss our findings in the study of ghost-mediated domain wall interactions in the diamondback ladder. These domain walls are the the spin excitations---the kinks and the antikinks---separating the ground states along one chain of the ladder. While as individual entities an antikink is energy costly and a kink energy free, our study finds that both interact via the ghosts that they produce in the opposite side of the ladder from where they are located. Through the study of these ghosts, we find that domain walls proliferate in the system above a critical value of the system's coupling constants. It is this proliferation that makes their treatment as free, non-interacting particles impossible, so we study here their interactions both quantitatively and qualitatively, in a region where the latter are yet not very strong, namely below the critical point. Based on the calculated two-body interaction potential, domain walls interact attractively (repulsively) when separated at even (odd) distances, with a strength that decays as 1/sp, where s is their separation and p<1. We also consider higher-order interactions. In the last chapter, Chapter 4, we present our study of the spin-1 kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet. Our approach is to first consider an SU(2)-symmetric parent Hamiltonian with known ground states on the S=1 kagome lattice, in which nearest-neighbor Heisenberg interactions are already present. We then enhance these interactions by an additional Heisenberg term added perturbatively in order to move the system closer to a pure Heisenberg antiferromagnet. The results of this enhancement is obtaining a description of the system in terms of an effective Hamiltonian, namely a transverse field Ising AF on the triangular lattice. Based on the particular values of this effective Hamiltonian, our system is found to be in the order-by-disorder phase.
Magnetism and charge density wave in GdNiC2 and NdNiC2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Klimczuk, Tom; Kolincio, Kamil; Wianiarski, Michal; Strychalska-Nowak, Judyta; Górnicka, Karolina
The RNiC2 compounds form in an orthorhombic Amm2 crystal structure with Ni and the rare-earth (R) metal chains along the crystallographic a-axis. This system is of particular interest because both a CDW and a long range magnetic ordering phases have been observed together. We report the specific heat, magnetic, magnetotransport and galvanomagnetic properties of GdNiC2 and NdNiC2 antiferromagnets. Complex B-T phase diagrams were built based on the specific heat data. Large negative magnetoresistance due to Zeeman splitting of the electronic bands and partial destruction of a charge density wave ground state is observed above TN. The magnetoresistance and Hall measurements show that at low temperatures a magnetic field induced transformation from antiferromagnetic order to a metamagnetic phase results in the partial suppression of the CDW. This project is financially supported by National Science Centre (Poland), Grant Number: UMO-2015/19/B/ST3/03127.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Morinari, Takao
2018-06-01
The central issue in high-temperature cuprate superconductors is the pseudogap state appearing below the pseudogap temperature T*, which is well above the superconducting transition temperature. In this study, we theoretically investigate the rapid increase of the magnetic anisotropy below the pseudogap temperature detected by the recent torque-magnetometry measurements on YBa2Cu3Oy [Y. Sato et al.,
Transient carrier dynamics in a Mott insulator with antiferromagnetic order
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Iyoda, Eiki; Ishihara, Sumio
2014-03-01
We study transient dynamics of hole carriers injected into a Mott insulator with antiferromagnetic long-range order. This "dynamical hole doping" contrasts with chemical hole doping. The theoretical framework for the transient carrier dynamics is presented based on the two-dimensional t-J model. The time dependencies of the optical conductivity spectra, as well as the one-particle excitation spectra, are calculated based on the Keldysh Green's function formalism at zero temperature combined with the self-consistent Born approximation. In the early stage after dynamical hole doping, the Drude component appears, and then incoherent components originating from hole-magnon scattering start to grow. Fast oscillatory behavior owing to coherent magnon and slow relaxation dynamics are confirmed in the spectra. The time profiles are interpreted as doped bare holes being dressed by magnon clouds and relaxed into spin polaron quasiparticle states. The characteristic relaxation times for Drude and incoherent peaks strongly depend on the momentum of the dynamically doped hole and the exchange constant. Implications for recent pump-probe experiments are discussed.
Kim, Tae Heon; Grünberg, Peter; Han, Song Hee; Cho, Beongki
2016-01-01
The spin-torque driven dynamics of antiferromagnets with Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) were investigated based on the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert-Slonczewski equation with antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic order parameters (l and m, respectively). We demonstrate that antiferromagnets including DMI can be described by a 2-dimensional pendulum model of l. Because m is coupled with l, together with DMI and exchange energy, close examination of m provides fundamental understanding of its dynamics in linear and nonlinear regimes. Furthermore, we discuss magnetization reversal as a function of DMI and anisotropy energy induced by a spin current pulse. PMID:27713522
Calculations of Exchange Bias in Thin Films with Ferromagnetic/Antiferromagnetic Interfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koon, N. C.
1997-06-01
A microscopic explanation of exchange bias in thin films with compensated ferro/antiferromagnetic interfaces is presented. Full micromagnetic calculations show the interfacial exchange coupling to be relatively strong with a perpendicular orientation between the ferro/antiferromagnetic axis directions, similar to the classic ``spin-flop'' state in bulk antiferromagnets. With reasonable parameters the calculations predict bias fields comparable to those observed and provide a possible explanation for both anomalous high field rotational hysteresis and recently discovered ``positive'' exchange bias.
Impurities near an antiferromagnetic-singlet quantum critical point
Mendes-Santos, T.; Costa, N. C.; Batrouni, G.; ...
2017-02-15
Heavy-fermion systems and other strongly correlated electron materials often exhibit a competition between antiferromagnetic (AF) and singlet ground states. We examine the effect of impurities in the vicinity of such an AF-singlet quantum critical point (QCP), through an appropriately defined “impurity susceptibility” χimp, using exact quantum Monte Carlo simulations. Our key finding is a connection within a single calculational framework between AF domains induced on the singlet side of the transition and the behavior of the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation rate 1/T1. Furthermore, we show that local NMR measurements provide a diagnostic for the location of the QCP, whichmore » agrees remarkably well with the vanishing of the AF order parameter and large values of χimp.« less
Antiferromagnetism and phase diagram in ammoniated alkali fulleride salts
Takenobu; Muro; Iwasa; Mitani
2000-07-10
Intercalation of neutral ammonia molecules into trivalent face-centered-cubic (fcc) fulleride superconductors induces a dramatic change in electronic states. Monoammoniated alkali fulleride salts (NH3)K3-xRbxC60, forming an isostructural orthorhombic series, undergo an antiferromagnetic transition, which was found by the electron spin resonance experiment. The Neel temperature first increases with the interfullerene spacing and then decreases for (NH3)Rb3C60, forming a maximum at 76 K. This feature is explained by the generalized phase diagram of Mott-Hubbard transition with an antiferromagnetic ground state.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tarne, M. J.; Bordelon, M. M.; Calder, S.; Neilson, J. R.; Ross, K. A.
2017-12-01
The insulating magnetic material Fe3PO4O3 features a noncentrosymmetric lattice composed of Fe3 + triangular units. Frustration, due to competing near-neighbor (J1) and next-nearest-neighbor (J2) antiferromagnetic interactions, was recently suggested to be the origin of an antiferromagnetic helical ground state with unusual needlelike nanoscale magnetic domains in Fe3PO4O3 . Magnetic dilution is shown here to tune the ratio of these magnetic interactions, thus providing deeper insight into this unconventional antiferromagnet. Dilution of the Fe3 + lattice in Fe3PO4O3 was accomplished by substituting nonmagnetic Ga3 + to form the solid solution series Fe3-xGaxPO4O3 with x =0.012 , 0.06, 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5. Magnetic susceptibility and neutron powder diffraction data from this series are presented. A continuous decrease of both the helical pitch length and the domain size is observed with increasing dilution up to at least x =0.25 , while for x ≥0.5 , the compounds lack long-range magnetic order entirely. The decrease in the helical pitch length with increasing x can be qualitatively understood by reduction of the ratio of J2/J1 in the Heisenberg model, consistent with mean-field considerations. Intriguingly, the magnetic correlation length in the a b plane remains nearly equal to the pitch length for each value of x ≤0.25 , showing that the two quantities are intrinsically connected in this unusual antiferromagnet.
Metamagnetism in hydrophobically induced carboxylate (phenylmalonate)-bridged copper(II) layers.
Pasán, Jorge; Sanchiz, Joaquín; Ruiz-Pérez, Catalina; Campo, Javier; Lloret, Francesc; Julve, Miguel
2006-07-21
Self-assembly of copper(l) ions, phenylmalonate and pyrimidine yields the layered compound [Cu(pym)(Phmal)n (1) where intralayer ferro- and interlayer antiferromagnetic interactions occur with three-dimensional antiferromagnetic ordering at T(c) = 2.15 K.
Antiferromagnetic defect structure in LaNi O 3 – δ single crystals
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wang, Bi -Xia; Rosenkranz, Stephan; Rui, X.
Here, the origins of the metal-insulator and magnetic transitions exhibited by perovskite rare-earth nickelates, RNiO 3 (where R is a rare-earth element), remain open issues, with charge disproportionation, magnetic interactions, and lattice response across multiple length scales being among the many possible origins. Recently, growth of single crystals of LaNiO 3, which is the only member of these compounds that remains metallic in its ground state, has been reported, opening a new chapter in the investigation of the perovskite nickelates. Here, using a combination of magnetometry, heat capacity, and neutron scattering on as-grown and purposely reduced LaNiO 3–δ crystals, wemore » show that both antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic phases with a Néel temperature of ~152 K and a Curie temperature of ~225 K can be induced by reduction of the oxygen content. Transmission electron microscopy shows that these phases are characterized by ordered oxygen vacancy defect structures that exist as dilute secondary phases in as-grown crystals despite growth in partial oxygen pressures up to at least 130 bar. The demonstration of antiferromagnetism resulting from oxygen vacancy ordered structures implies that stoichiometry must be explicitly considered when interpreting the bulk properties of LaNiO 3–δ single crystals; accordingly, the implications of our results for putative oxygen-stoichiometric LaNiO 3 are discussed.« less
Hao, Lin; Meyers, D.; Frederick, Clayton; ...
2017-07-14
We report an experimental investigation of the two-dimensional J eff=1/2 antiferromagnetic Mott insulator by varying the interlayer exchange coupling in [(SrIrO 3) 1, (SrTiO 3) m] (m=1, 2 and 3) superlattices. Although all samples exhibited an insulating ground state with long-range magnetic order, temperature-dependent resistivity measurements showed a stronger insulating behavior in the m = 2 and m = 3 samples than the m = 1 sample which displayed a clear kink at the magnetic transition. This difference indicates that the blocking effect of the excessive SrTiO 3 layer enhances the effective electron-electron correlation and strengthens the Mott phase. Themore » significant reduction of the Néel temperature from 150 K for m = 1 to 40 K for m = 2 demonstrates that the long-range order stability in the former is boosted by a substantial interlayer exchange coupling. Resonant x-ray magnetic scattering revealed that the interlayer exchange coupling has a switchable sign, depending on the SrTiO 3 layer number m, for maintaining canting-induced weak ferromagnetism. In conclusion, the nearly unaltered transition temperature between the m = 2 and the m = 3 demonstrated that we have realized a two-dimensional antiferromagnet at finite temperatures with diminishing interlayer exchange coupling.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hao, Lin; Meyers, D.; Frederick, Clayton
We report an experimental investigation of the two-dimensional J eff=1/2 antiferromagnetic Mott insulator by varying the interlayer exchange coupling in [(SrIrO 3) 1, (SrTiO 3) m] (m=1, 2 and 3) superlattices. Although all samples exhibited an insulating ground state with long-range magnetic order, temperature-dependent resistivity measurements showed a stronger insulating behavior in the m = 2 and m = 3 samples than the m = 1 sample which displayed a clear kink at the magnetic transition. This difference indicates that the blocking effect of the excessive SrTiO 3 layer enhances the effective electron-electron correlation and strengthens the Mott phase. Themore » significant reduction of the Néel temperature from 150 K for m = 1 to 40 K for m = 2 demonstrates that the long-range order stability in the former is boosted by a substantial interlayer exchange coupling. Resonant x-ray magnetic scattering revealed that the interlayer exchange coupling has a switchable sign, depending on the SrTiO 3 layer number m, for maintaining canting-induced weak ferromagnetism. In conclusion, the nearly unaltered transition temperature between the m = 2 and the m = 3 demonstrated that we have realized a two-dimensional antiferromagnet at finite temperatures with diminishing interlayer exchange coupling.« less
Antiferromagnetic defect structure in LaNi O3 -δ single crystals
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Bi-Xia; Rosenkranz, S.; Rui, X.; Zhang, Junjie; Ye, F.; Zheng, H.; Klie, R. F.; Mitchell, J. F.; Phelan, D.
2018-06-01
The origins of the metal-insulator and magnetic transitions exhibited by perovskite rare-earth nickelates, RNiO3 (where R is a rare-earth element), remain open issues, with charge disproportionation, magnetic interactions, and lattice response across multiple length scales being among the many possible origins. Recently, growth of single crystals of LaNiO3, which is the only member of these compounds that remains metallic in its ground state, has been reported, opening a new chapter in the investigation of the perovskite nickelates. Here, using a combination of magnetometry, heat capacity, and neutron scattering on as-grown and purposely reduced LaNi O3 -δ crystals, we show that both antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic phases with a Néel temperature of ˜152 K and a Curie temperature of ˜225 K can be induced by reduction of the oxygen content. Transmission electron microscopy shows that these phases are characterized by ordered oxygen vacancy defect structures that exist as dilute secondary phases in as-grown crystals despite growth in partial oxygen pressures up to at least 130 bar. The demonstration of antiferromagnetism resulting from oxygen vacancy ordered structures implies that stoichiometry must be explicitly considered when interpreting the bulk properties of LaNi O3 -δ single crystals; accordingly, the implications of our results for putative oxygen-stoichiometric LaNiO3 are discussed.
Antiferromagnetic defect structure in LaNi O 3 – δ single crystals
Wang, Bi -Xia; Rosenkranz, Stephan; Rui, X.; ...
2018-06-12
Here, the origins of the metal-insulator and magnetic transitions exhibited by perovskite rare-earth nickelates, RNiO 3 (where R is a rare-earth element), remain open issues, with charge disproportionation, magnetic interactions, and lattice response across multiple length scales being among the many possible origins. Recently, growth of single crystals of LaNiO 3, which is the only member of these compounds that remains metallic in its ground state, has been reported, opening a new chapter in the investigation of the perovskite nickelates. Here, using a combination of magnetometry, heat capacity, and neutron scattering on as-grown and purposely reduced LaNiO 3–δ crystals, wemore » show that both antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic phases with a Néel temperature of ~152 K and a Curie temperature of ~225 K can be induced by reduction of the oxygen content. Transmission electron microscopy shows that these phases are characterized by ordered oxygen vacancy defect structures that exist as dilute secondary phases in as-grown crystals despite growth in partial oxygen pressures up to at least 130 bar. The demonstration of antiferromagnetism resulting from oxygen vacancy ordered structures implies that stoichiometry must be explicitly considered when interpreting the bulk properties of LaNiO 3–δ single crystals; accordingly, the implications of our results for putative oxygen-stoichiometric LaNiO 3 are discussed.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Samal, S.L.; Magdaleno, T.; Ramanujachary, K.V.
Oxides of the type YbMn{sub 1-x}Fe{sub x}O{sub 3}; x<=0.3 showing multiferroic behavior have been synthesized by the solid state route. These oxides crystallize in the hexagonal structure known for the parent YbMnO{sub 3} with the c/a ratio increasing with Fe substitution. The distortion of the MnO{sub 5} polyhedra (tbp) decreases and the Mn-O-Mn bonds in the a-b plane become shorter with Fe-substitution. Magnetic ordering is observed from the low temperature neutron diffraction study. The compounds were found to be antiferromagnetic and the ordering temperature T{sub N} increased from 82 K for pure YbMnO{sub 3} to 95 K for YbMn{sub 0.7}Fe{submore » 0.3}O{sub 3}. Variable temperature dielectric measurements (15-110 K) show an anomaly in the dielectric constant at temperatures close to the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature for all the compositions, showing a unique correlation between the magnetic and electric field. The increase in the ordering temperature in YbMn{sub 1-x}Fe{sub x}O{sub 3} is explained on the basis of increase in covalence of Mn/Fe-O-Mn/Fe bonds (shorter) with iron substitution. - Graphical abstract: Hexagonal manganites of the type YbMn{sub 1-x}Fe{sub x}O{sub 3}; x<=0.3 have been synthesized by the solid state route. The distortion of the MnO{sub 5} polyhedra (tbp) decreases and the Mn-O-Mn bonds in the a-b plane become shorter with Fe-substitution. The compounds were found to be antiferromagnetic and the ordering temperature T{sub N} increased from 82 K for pure YbMnO{sub 3} to 95 K for YbMn{sub 0.7}Fe{sub 0.3}O{sub 3}. The increase in the ordering temperature in YbMn{sub 1-x}Fe{sub x}O{sub 3} is explained on the basis of increase in covalence of Mn/Fe-O-Mn/Fe bonds with iron substitution. Low temperature dielectric measurements show a unique correlation between the magnetic and electric fields for all compositions.« less
Magnetism and anisotropy of Ir5+ based double perovskites Sr2CoIrO6andSr2FeIrO6
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Terzic, Jasminka; Yuan, S. J.; Song, W. H.; Aswartham, S.; Cao, G.
2015-03-01
We report on structural, thermodynamic and transport study of single-crystal double perovskites Sr2CoIrO6andSr2FeIrO6.TheisostructuralSr2CoIrO6andSr2FeIrO6 feature a cubic crystal structure with pentavalent Ir5+(5d4) which are anticipated to have J =0 singlet ground states in the strong spin-orbit coupling limit. Here we observe magnetic coupling between 5d and 3d (Co, Fe) elements, which result in antiferromagnetic order at high temperatures in both double perovskites. Of the two, Sr2CoIrO6 displays antiferromagnetic metallic behavior with a pronounced magnetic anisotropy; in sharp contrast, the isostructural Sr2FeIrO6 exhibits an antiferroamagnetic, insulating ground state without discernible magnetic anisotropy. The data will be discussed and presented with comparisons drawn with similar systems. This work was supported by NSF via Grant DMR 1265162.
NMR determination of an incommensurate helical antiferromagnetic structure in EuCo 2 As 2
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Ding, Q. -P.; Higa, N.; Sangeetha, N. S.
In this paper, we report 153Eu, 75As, and 59Co nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) results on EuCo 2As 2 single crystal. Observations of 153Eu and 75As NMR spectra in zero magnetic field at 4.3 K below an antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering temperature T N = 45 K and its external magnetic field dependence clearly evidence an incommensurate helical AFM structure in EuCo 2As 2. Furthermore, based on 59Co NMR data in both the paramagnetic and the incommensurate AFM states, we have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k = (0,0,0.73 ± 0.07)2π/c, where c is the c lattice parameter.more » Finally, the incommensurate helical AFM state was characterized by only NMR data with model-independent analyses, showing NMR to be a unique tool for determination of the spin structure in incommensurate helical AFMs.« less
NMR determination of an incommensurate helical antiferromagnetic structure in EuCo 2 As 2
Ding, Q. -P.; Higa, N.; Sangeetha, N. S.; ...
2017-05-05
In this paper, we report 153Eu, 75As, and 59Co nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) results on EuCo 2As 2 single crystal. Observations of 153Eu and 75As NMR spectra in zero magnetic field at 4.3 K below an antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering temperature T N = 45 K and its external magnetic field dependence clearly evidence an incommensurate helical AFM structure in EuCo 2As 2. Furthermore, based on 59Co NMR data in both the paramagnetic and the incommensurate AFM states, we have determined the model-independent value of the AFM propagation vector k = (0,0,0.73 ± 0.07)2π/c, where c is the c lattice parameter.more » Finally, the incommensurate helical AFM state was characterized by only NMR data with model-independent analyses, showing NMR to be a unique tool for determination of the spin structure in incommensurate helical AFMs.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jayasekara, W. T.; Pandey, Abhishek; Kreyssig, A.; Sangeetha, N. S.; Sapkota, A.; Kothapalli, K.; Anand, V. K.; Tian, W.; Vaknin, D.; Johnston, D. C.; McQueeney, R. J.; Goldman, A. I.; Ueland, B. G.
2017-02-01
Magnetization, neutron diffraction, and high-energy x-ray diffraction results for Sn-flux grown single-crystal samples of Ca (Co1-xFex) yAs2 , 0 ≤x ≤1 , 1.86 ≤y ≤2 , are presented and reveal that A-type antiferromagnetic order, with ordered moments lying along the c axis, persists for x ≲0.12 (1 ) . The antiferromagnetic order is smoothly suppressed with increasing x , with both the ordered moment and Néel temperature linearly decreasing. Stripe-type antiferromagnetic order does not occur for x ≤0.25 , nor does ferromagnetic order for x up to at least x =0.104 , and a smooth crossover from the collapsed-tetragonal (cT) phase of CaCo1.86As2 to the tetragonal (T) phase of CaFe2As2 occurs. These results suggest that hole doping CaCo1.86As2 has a less dramatic effect on the magnetism and structure than steric effects due to substituting Sr for Ca.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kreyssig, Andreas; Beutier, Guillaume; Hiroto, Takanobu; Kim, Min Gyu; Tucker, Gregory S.; de Boissieu, Marc; Tamura, Ryuji; Goldman, Alan I.
2013-09-01
It has generally been accepted that the orientational ordering of the Cd4 tetrahedron within the Cd6 R quasicrystal approximants is kinetically inhibited for R = Ho, Er, Tm and Lu by steric constraints. Our high-resolution X-ray scattering measurements of the Cd6Ho quasicrystal approximant, however, reveal an abrupt (first-order) transition to a monoclinic structure below T S = 178 K for samples that have 'aged' at room temperature for approximately one year, reopening this question. Using X-ray resonant magnetic scattering at the Ho L 3-edge we have elucidated the nature of the antiferromagnetic ordering below T N = 8.5 K in Cd6Ho. The magnetic Bragg peaks are found at the charge forbidden H + K + L = 2n + 1 positions, referenced to the high-temperature body-centred cubic structure. In general terms, this corresponds to antiferromagnetic arrangements of the Ho moments on adjacent clusters in the unit cell as previously found for Cd6Tb.
Low temperature magnetic properties of GdFeO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Paul, Pralay; Prajapat, C. L.; Rajarajan, A. K.; Rao, T. V. Chandrasekhar
2018-04-01
Polycrystalline GdFeO3 was prepared using conventional solid state reaction method. Magnetization studies at low temperatures show antiferromagnetic ordering of Gd moments at ˜2.5K. Saturation in magnetization is noted at 2K under moderate magnetic fields, a result hitherto unreported. We conjecture that such a saturation is indicative of weakening of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction between Gd and Fe sublattices.
Room-temperature antiferromagnetic memory resistor.
Marti, X; Fina, I; Frontera, C; Liu, Jian; Wadley, P; He, Q; Paull, R J; Clarkson, J D; Kudrnovský, J; Turek, I; Kuneš, J; Yi, D; Chu, J-H; Nelson, C T; You, L; Arenholz, E; Salahuddin, S; Fontcuberta, J; Jungwirth, T; Ramesh, R
2014-04-01
The bistability of ordered spin states in ferromagnets provides the basis for magnetic memory functionality. The latest generation of magnetic random access memories rely on an efficient approach in which magnetic fields are replaced by electrical means for writing and reading the information in ferromagnets. This concept may eventually reduce the sensitivity of ferromagnets to magnetic field perturbations to being a weakness for data retention and the ferromagnetic stray fields to an obstacle for high-density memory integration. Here we report a room-temperature bistable antiferromagnetic (AFM) memory that produces negligible stray fields and is insensitive to strong magnetic fields. We use a resistor made of a FeRh AFM, which orders ferromagnetically roughly 100 K above room temperature, and therefore allows us to set different collective directions for the Fe moments by applied magnetic field. On cooling to room temperature, AFM order sets in with the direction of the AFM moments predetermined by the field and moment direction in the high-temperature ferromagnetic state. For electrical reading, we use an AFM analogue of the anisotropic magnetoresistance. Our microscopic theory modelling confirms that this archetypical spintronic effect, discovered more than 150 years ago in ferromagnets, is also present in AFMs. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of fabricating room-temperature spintronic memories with AFMs, which in turn expands the base of available magnetic materials for devices with properties that cannot be achieved with ferromagnets.
Anomalous Z2 antiferromagnetic topological phase in pressurized SmB6
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chang, Kai-Wei; Chen, Peng-Jen
2018-05-01
Antiferromagnetic materials, whose time-reversal symmetry is broken, can be classified into the Z2 topology if they respect some specific symmetry. Since the theoretical proposal, however, no materials have been found to host such Z2 antiferromagnetic topological (Z2-AFT ) phase to date. Here we demonstrate that the topological Kondo insulator SmB6 can be a Z2-AFT system when pressurized to undergo an antiferromagnetic phase transition. In addition to proposing the possible candidate for a Z2-AFT material, in this work we also illustrate the anomalous topological surface states of the Z2-AFT phase which have not been discussed before. Originating from the interplay between the topological properties and the antiferromagnetic surface magnetization, the topological surface states of the Z2-AFT phase behave differently as compared with those of a topological insulator. Besides, the Z2-AFT insulators are also found promising in the generation of tunable spin currents, which is an important application in spintronics.
Exchange field effect in the crystal-field ground state of Ce M Al 4 Si 2
Chen, K.; Strigari, F.; Sundermann, M.; ...
2016-09-06
The crystal-field ground-state wave functions of the tetragonal, magnetically ordering Kondo lattice materials CeMAl 4Si 2 (M = Rh, Ir, and Pt) are determined in this paper with low-temperature linearly polarized soft-x-ray absorption spectroscopy, and estimates for the crystal-field splittings are given from the temperature evolution of the linear dichroism. Values for the dominant exchange field in the magnetically ordered phases can be obtained from fitting the influence of magnetic order on the linear dichroism. The direction of the required exchange field is || c for the antiferromagnetic Rh and Ir compounds, with the corresponding strength of the order ofmore » λ ex ≈ 6 meV (65 K). Finally and furthermore, the presence of Kondo screening in the Rh and Ir compound is demonstrated on the basis of the absorption due to f 0 in the initial state.« less
Unique Pressure versus Temperature Phase Diagram for Antiferromagnets Eu2Ni3Ge5 and EuRhSi3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nakashima, Miho; Amako, Yasushi; Matsubayashi, Kazuyuki; Uwatoko, Yoshiya; Nada, Masato; Sugiyama, Kiyohiro; Hagiwara, Masayuki; Haga, Yoshinori; Takeuchi, Tetsuya; Nakamura, Ai; Akamine, Hiromu; Tomori, Keisuke; Yara, Tomoyuki; Ashitomi, Yosuke; Hedo, Masato; Nakama, Takao; Ōnuki, Yoshichika
2017-03-01
We studied the magnetic properties of the antiferromagnets Eu2Ni3Ge5 and EuRhSi3 by measuring their electrical resistivity, specific heat, magnetic susceptibility, magnetization, and thermoelectric power, together with the electrical resistivities at high pressures of up to 15 GPa. These compounds have almost divalent Eu ions at ambient pressure and order antiferromagnetically with a successive change in the antiferromagnetic structure at TN = 19 K and T'N = 17 K in Eu2Ni3Ge5, and at TN = 49 K and T'N = 45 K in EuRhSi3. Magnetic field versus temperature (H-T) phase diagrams were constructed for both compounds from the magnetization measurements. The Néel temperature in Eu2Ni3Ge5 was found to increase up to 7 GPa but to decrease continuously with further increasing pressure, without the so-called valence transition. Under a high pressure of 15 GPa, Kondo-like behavior of the electrical resistivity was observed, suggesting the existence of the heavy-fermion state at low temperatures. A similar trend is likely to occur in EuRhSi3. The present P-T phase diagrams for both compounds are the first cases that are reminiscent of the phase diagram of EuCu2(SixGe1-x)2.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kleemann, W.; Shvartsman, V. V.; Borisov, P.; Kania, A.
2010-12-01
The coexistence of cluster glass with long-range antiferromagnetic order in the relaxor ferroelectric PbFe0.5Nb0.5O3 is elucidated. While the transition at TN=153K on the infinite antiferromagnetic cluster induces 3m symmetry with large EH2 magnetoelectric response, the disconnected subspace of isolated Fe3+ ions and finite clusters accommodates the cluster glass below Tg=10.6K with field-induced m' symmetry and EH-type magnetoelectric response. Critical slowing-down, memory and rejuvenation after aging, occurrence of a de Almeida-Thouless phase line, and stretched exponential relaxation of remanence corroborate the glass nature.
Theoretical study on perpendicular magnetoelectric coupling in ferroelectromagnet system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhong, Chonggui; Jiang, Qing
2002-06-01
We apply the Heisenberg model for antiferromagnetic interaction and Diffour model for ferroelectric interaction to analyze the magnetic, electric, magnetoelectric property in the system with the spontaneous coexistence of the ferroelectric and antiferromagnetic orders below a certain temperature. The soft mode theory is used to calculate the on-site polarization and mean field theory is applied to deal with the on-site magnetization. We also present the perpendicular magnetoelectric susceptibility χme⊥, polarization susceptibility χp as a function of temperature, and discuss the effect of the inherent magnetoelectric coupling on them. In addition, it is found that an anomaly appears in the curve of the polarization susceptibility due to the coupling between the ferroelectric and antiferromagnetic orders.
Chow, Chun Y.; Bolvin, Hélène; Campbell, Victoria E.; Guillot, Régis; Kampf, Jeff W.; Wernsdorfer, Wolfgang; Gendron, Frédéric; Autschbach, Jochen
2015-01-01
We report here the synthesis and the investigation of the magnetic properties of a series of binuclear lanthanide complexes belonging to the metallacrown family. The isostructural complexes have a core structure with the general formula [Ga4Ln2(shi3–)4(Hshi2–)2(H2shi–)2(C5H5N)4(CH3OH)x(H2O)x]·xC5H5N·xCH3OH·xH2O (where H3shi = salicylhydroxamic acid and Ln = GdIII1; TbIII2; DyIII3; ErIII4; YIII5; YIII0.9DyIII0.16). Apart from the Er-containing complex, all complexes exhibit an antiferromagnetic exchange coupling leading to a diamagnetic ground state. Magnetic studies, below 2 K, on a single crystal of 3 using a micro-squid array reveal an opening of the magnetic hysteresis cycle at zero field. The dynamic susceptibility studies of 3 and of the diluted DyY 6 complexes reveal the presence of two relaxation processes for 3 that are due to the excited ferromagnetic state and to the uncoupled DyIII ions. The antiferromagnetic coupling in 3 was shown to be mainly due to an exchange mechanism, which accounts for about 2/3 of the energy gap between the antiferro- and the ferromagnetic states. The overlap integrals between the Natural Spin Orbitals (NSOs) of the mononuclear fragments, which are related to the magnitude of the antiferromagnetic exchange, are one order of magnitude larger for the Dy2 than for the Er2 complex. PMID:29218180
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kang, Yoon-Gu; Kim, Sun-Woo; Cho, Jun-Hyung
2017-12-01
Low-dimensional electron systems often show a delicate interplay between electron-phonon and electron-electron interactions, giving rise to interesting quantum phases such as the charge density wave (CDW) and magnetism. Using the density-functional theory (DFT) calculations with the semilocal and hybrid exchange-correlation functionals as well as the exact-exchange plus correlation in the random-phase approximation (EX + cRPA), we systematically investigate the ground state of the metallic atom wires containing dangling-bond (DB) electrons, fabricated by partially hydrogenating the GaN(10 1 ¯0 ) and ZnO(10 1 ¯0 ) surfaces. We find that the CDW or antiferromagnetic (AFM) order has an electronic energy gain due to a band-gap opening, thereby being more stabilized compared to the metallic state. Our semilocal DFT calculation predicts that both DB wires in GaN(10 1 ¯0 ) and ZnO(10 1 ¯0 ) have the same CDW ground state, whereas the hybrid DFT and EX + cRPA calculations predict the AFM ground state for the former DB wire and the CDW ground state for the latter one. It is revealed that more localized Ga DB electrons in GaN(10 1 ¯0 ) prefer the AFM order, while less localized Zn DB electrons in ZnO(10 1 ¯0 ) the CDW formation. Our findings demonstrate that the drastically different ground states are competing in the DB wires created on the two representative compound semiconductor surfaces.
Ab initio investigation of competing antiferromagnetic structures in low Si-content FeMn(PSi) alloy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, Guijiang; Eriksson, Olle; Johansson, Börje; Vitos, Levente
2016-06-01
The antiferromagnetic structures of a low Si-content FeMn(PSi) alloy were investigated by first principles calculations. One possible antiferromagnetic structure in supercell along the c-axis was revealed in FeMnP0.75Si0.25 alloy. It was found that atomic disorder occupation between Fe atom on 3f and Mn atoms on 3g sites is responsible for the formation of antiferromagnetic structures. Furthermore the magnetic competition and the coupling between possible AFM supercells along the c and a-axis can promote a non-collinear antiferromagnetic structure. These theoretical investigations help to deeply understand the magnetic order in FeMn(PSi) alloys and benefit to explore the potential magnetocaloric materials in Fe2P-type alloys.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Samatham, S. Shanmukharao; Suresh, K. G.
2017-01-01
The detailed magnetic study of complex 3d-electron based Fe3Ga4 is reported. It undergoes paramagnetic to antiferromagnetic (TN) and antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic (TC) transitions respectively around 380 and 70 K. The thermal hysteresis of field-cooled cooling (FCC) and field-cooled warming (FCW) hints at first order phase transition below Curie temperature. A weak phase coexistence of ferro and antiferromagnetic phases is suggested by exploring the arrest-like first-order phenomenon. In the intermediate temperature range, field-driven metamagnetic transition from antiferro to ferromagnetic phase is confirmed. Further bringing the system very near to TN, field-induced transitions disappear and above TN predominant paramagnetic contribution is evident. The magnetic H-T phase diagram distinguishing different magnetic phases of Fe3Ga4 is obtained.
Varieties of Dioptase: Their Magnetic Structure and Collective Excitations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Prisk, T.; Hoffmann, C.; Kolesnikov, A.; Anovitz, L. M.; Matsuda, M.; Podlesnyak, A.; Yan, J.
2017-12-01
Diopase [Cu6Si6O18 * 6 H2O] is a copper cyclosilicate mineral that exists within three different polymorphic forms. In the naturally occurring green phase, micropore channels are formed by corrugated rings of Si6O18 connected by Cu2+ ions. These channels contain rings of water molecules H2O which are co-ordinated to the Cu2+ ions, forming Jahn-Teller distorted octahedra. This results in the polymorph's green color. When the mineral is annealed at 400 C, it transforms into a blue polymorph where the positions of the the water molecules H2O become disordered within the channels. If annealed at 600 C, the water molecules are expelled from crystal structure altogether, leaving intact a framework where where the copper atom has quasi-planar co-ordination with neighboring oxygen atoms. The Cu2+ ions are responsible for the appearance of long-range antiferromagnetic order in green dioptase at 14 K. Comparative magnetic susceptibility measurements of these polymorphs demonstrate that altering the hydration state of the mineral leads to profound changes in its magnetic properties. This is presumably due to the fact that the local environment of the Cu2+ ions is modified by changes in the Cu atom's co-ordination with the water oxygen. Green, blue, and black dioptase together provide a case study in the coupling of a mineral's hydration state to its magnetic properties. In this presentation, we report upon a comparative study of dioptase polymorphs. We have applied heat capacity, magnetic susceptibility, single-crystal diffraction, and inelastic neutron scattering techniques. Magnetic diffraction patterns were obtained using the Polarized Triple Axis Spectrometer at the High Flux Isotope Reactor, while measurements of the spin wave dispersion were performed using the Cold Neutron Chopper Spectrometer at the Spallation Neutron Source. We find that, in green dioptase, the Cu2+ ions form spiral antiferromagnetic chains parallel to the micropore channels. However, in blue dioptase, long-range antiferromagnetic order is completely suppressed down to at least 2 K. Black dioptase undergoes a phase transition at 7 K into a low dimensional antiferromagnet, apparently having a different magnetic structure from its green counterpart.
First-order melting of a weak spin-orbit mott insulator into a correlated metal
Hogan, Tom; Yamani, Z.; Walkup, D.; ...
2015-06-25
Herein, the electronic phase diagram of the weak spin-orbit Mott insulator (Sr 1-xLa x) 3Ir 2O 7 is determined via an exhaustive experimental study. Upon doping electrons via La substitution, an immediate collapse in resistivity occurs along with a narrow regime of nanoscale phase separation comprised of antiferromagnetic, insulating regions and paramagnetic, metallic puddles persisting until x≈0.04. Continued electron doping results in an abrupt, first-order phase boundary where the Néel state is suppressed and a homogenous, correlated, metallic state appears with an enhanced spin susceptibility and local moments. In conclusion, as the metallic state is stabilized, a weak structural distortionmore » develops and suggests a competing instability with the parent spin-orbit Mott state.« less
Spin frustration and magnetic ordering in triangular lattice antiferromagnet Ca3CoNb2O9
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dai, Jia; Zhou, Ping; Wang, Peng-Shuai; Pang, Fei; Munsie, Tim J.; Luke, Graeme M.; Zhang, Jin-Shan; Yu, Wei-Qiang
2015-12-01
We synthesized a quasi-two-dimensional distorted triangular lattice antiferromagnet Ca3CoNb2O9, in which the effective spin of Co2+ is 1/2 at low temperatures, whose magnetic properties were studied by dc susceptibility and magnetization techniques. The x-ray diffraction confirms the quality of our powder samples. The large Weiss constant θCW˜ -55 K and the low Neel temperature TN˜ 1.45 K give a frustration factor f = | θCW/TN | ≈ 38, suggesting that Ca3CoNb2O9 resides in strong frustration regime. Slightly below TN, deviation between the susceptibility data under zero-field cooling (ZFC) and field cooling (FC) is observed. A new magnetic state with 1/3 of the saturate magnetization Ms is suggested in the magnetization curve at 0.46 K. Our study indicates that Ca3CoNb2O9 is an interesting material to investigate magnetism in triangular lattice antiferromagnets with weak anisotropy. Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 11374364 and 11222433), the National Basic Research Program of China (Grant No. 2011CBA00112). Research at McMaster University supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council. Work at North China Electric Power University supported by the Scientific Research Foundation for the Returned Overseas Chinese Scholars, State Education Ministry.
Abram, M; Zegrodnik, M; Spałek, J
2017-09-13
In the first part of the paper, we study the stability of antiferromagnetic (AF), charge density wave (CDW), and superconducting (SC) states within the t-J-U-V model of strongly correlated electrons by using the statistically consistent Gutzwiller approximation (SGA). We concentrate on the role of the intersite Coulomb interaction term V in stabilizing the CDW phase. In particular, we show that the charge ordering appears only above a critical value of V in a limited hole-doping range δ. The effect of the V term on SC and AF phases is that a strong interaction suppresses SC, whereas the AF order is not significantly influenced by its presence. In the second part, separate calculations for the case of a pure SC phase have been carried out within an extended approach (the diagrammatic expansion for the Gutzwiller wave function, DE-GWF) in order to analyze the influence of the intersite Coulomb repulsion on the SC phase with the higher-order corrections included beyond the SGA method. The upper concentration for the SC disappearance decreases with increasing V, bringing the results closer to experiment. In appendices A and B we discuss the ambiguity connected with the choice of the Gutzwiller renormalization factors within the renormalized mean filed theory when either AF or CDW orders are considered. At the end, we overview briefly the possible extensions of the current models to put descriptions of the SC, AF, and CDW states on equal footing.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shore, Joel; Thurston, George
We discuss a model for a charge-patterning phase transition on a two-dimensional square lattice of titratable sites, here regarded as protonation sites, placed on a square lattice in a dielectric medium just below the planar interface between this medium and an aqueous salt solution. Within Debye-Huckel theory, the analytical form of the electrostatic repulsion between protonated sites exhibits an approximate inverse cubic power-law decrease beyond short distances. The problem can thus be mapped onto the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic Ising model with this longer-range interaction, which we study with Monte Carlo simulations. As we increase pH, the occupation probability of a site decreases from 1 at low pH to 0 at high pH. For sufficiently-strong interaction strengths, a phase transition occurs as the occupation probability of 1/2 is approached: the charges arrange themselves into a checkerboard pattern. This ordered phase persists over a range of pH until a transition occurs back to a disordered state. This state is the analogue of the Neel state in the antiferromagnetic Ising spin model. More complicated ordered phases are expected for sufficiently strong interactions (with occupation probabilities of 1/4 and 3/4) and if the lattice is triangular rather than square. This work was supported by NIH EY018249 (GMT).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wang, Nannan; College of Materials Science and Engineering, Fuzhou University, Fuzhou, Fujian 350108; He, Zhangzhen, E-mail: hcz1988@hotmail.com
2015-08-15
Two vanadate compounds Ca{sub 5}M{sub 4}V{sub 6}O{sub 24} (M=Co, Ni) have been synthesized by a high-temperature solid-state reaction. The compounds are found to crystallize in the cubic system with a space group Ia-3d, which exhibit a typical garnet structural framework. Magnetic measurements show that Ca{sub 5}M{sub 4}V{sub 6}O{sub 24} (M=Co, Ni) exhibit similar magnetic behaviors, in which Ca{sub 5}Co{sub 4}V{sub 6}O{sub 24} possesses an antiferromagnetic ordering at T{sub N}=~6 K while Ca{sub 5}Ni{sub 4}V{sub 6}O{sub 24} shows an antiferromagnetic ordering at T{sub N}=~7 K. - Graphical abstract: Garnet vanadate compounds Ca{sub 5}M{sub 4}V{sub 6}O{sub 24} (M=Co, Ni) have been synthesizedmore » by a high-temperature solid-state reaction. Structural features and magnetic behaviors are also investigated. - Highlights: • New type of garnet vanadates Ca{sub 5}M{sub 4}V{sub 6}O{sub 24} (M=Co, Ni) are synthesized by a high-temperature solid-state reaction. • Structural features are confirmed by single crystal samples. • Magnetic behaviors are firstly investigated in the systems.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kurbakov, A. I.; Korshunov, A. N.; Podchezertsev, S. Yu.; Malyshev, A. L.; Evstigneeva, M. A.; Damay, F.; Park, J.; Koo, C.; Klingeler, R.; Zvereva, E. A.; Nalbandyan, V. B.
2017-07-01
The magnetic structure of L i3N i2Sb O6 has been determined by low-temperature neutron diffraction, and the crystal structure has been refined by a combination of synchrotron and neutron powder diffraction. The monoclinic (C 2 /m ) symmetry, assigned previously to this pseudohexagonal layered structure, has been unambiguously proven by peak splitting in the synchrotron diffraction pattern. The structure is based on essentially hexagonal honeycomb-ordered N i2Sb O6 layers alternating with L i3 layers, all cations and anions being in an octahedral environment. The compound orders antiferromagnetically below TN=15 K , with the magnetic supercell being a 2 a ×2 b multiple of the crystal cell. The magnetic structure within the honeycomb layer consists of zigzag ferromagnetic spin chains coupled antiferromagnetically. The ordered magnetic moment amounts to 1.62 (2 ) μB/Ni , which is slightly lower than the full theoretical value. Upon cooling below TN, the spins tilt from the c axis, with a maximum tilting angle of 15 .6∘ at T =1.5 K . Our data imply non-negligible ferromagnetic interactions between the honeycomb layers. The observed antiferromagnetic resonance modes are in agreement with the two-sublattice model derived from the neutron data. Orthorhombic anisotropy shows up in zero-field splitting of Δ =198 ±4 and 218 ±4 GHz . Above TN, the electron spin resonance data imply short-range antiferromagnetic order up to about 80 K.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Choi, Deung-Jang; Fernández, Carlos García; Herrera, Edwin; Rubio-Verdú, Carmen; Ugeda, Miguel M.; Guillamón, Isabel; Suderow, Hermann; Pascual, José Ignacio; Lorente, Nicolás
2018-04-01
We show that the magnetic ordering of coupled atomic dimers on a superconductor is revealed by their intragap spectral features. Chromium atoms on the superconductor β -Bi2Pd surface display Yu-Shiba-Rusinov bound states, detected as pairs of intragap excitations in tunneling spectra. By means of atomic manipulation with a scanning tunneling microscope's tip, we form Cr dimers with different arrangements and find that their intragap features appear either shifted or split with respect to single atoms. These spectral variations are associated with the magnetic coupling, ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic, of the dimer, as confirmed by density functional theory simulations. The striking qualitative differences between the observed tunneling spectra prove that intragap Shiba states are extremely sensitive to the magnetic ordering on the atomic scale.
Magnetic ground state and electronic structure of CeRu(2)Al(10).
Goraus, Jerzy; Ślebarski, Andrzej
2012-03-07
We present a combined theoretical and experimental study of the electronic structure for CeRu(2)Al(10) based on ab initio band structure calculations and x-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) data. Our calculations were performed for the base unit cell and for the hypothetical unit cell which enables antiferromagnetic ordering. The stability of the magnetic phase was investigated within fixed spin moment calculations. When additional 4f correlations are not included in the LSDA C U approach, CeRu(2)Al(10) exhibits an unstable magnetic configuration with the difference in total energy per unit cell between the weakly magnetic state and the non-magnetic one of the order ~0.3 meV. We found that Coulomb correlations among 4f electrons, when they are included in the LSDA C U approach, stabilize the magnetic structure. In the weakly correlated system (small U) an antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground state with the lowest total energy is preferred. The situation is, however, the opposite when the 4f correlations are strong. In this case the ferromagnetic (FM) ground state is preferred. By comparing our calculations with the experimental data we conclude that the 4f correlations in CeRu(2)Al(10) are weak. We also carried out a structural relaxation of atomic positions within the Cmcm unit cell and we found that the Al atoms exhibit noticeable displacement from their positions known from x-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghorbani, Elaheh; Shahbazi, Farhad; Mosadeq, Hamid
2016-10-01
Using the modified spin wave method, we study the {{J}1}-{{J}2} Heisenberg model with first and second neighbor antiferromagnetic exchange interactions. For a symmetric S = 1/2 model, with the same couplings for all the equivalent neighbors, we find three phases in terms of the frustration parameter \\barα={{J}2}/{{J}1} : (1) a commensurate collinear ordering with staggered magnetization (Néel.I state) for 0≤slant \\barα≲ 0.207 , (2) a magnetically gapped disordered state for 0.207≲ \\barα≲ 0.369 , preserving all the symmetries of the Hamiltonian and lattice, which by definition is a quantum spin liquid (QSL) state and (3) a commensurate collinear ordering in which two out of the three nearest neighbor magnetizations are antiparallel and the remaining pair are parallel (Néel.II state), for 0.396≲ \\barα≤slant 1 . We also explore the phase diagram of a distorted {{J}1}-{{J}2} model with S = 1/2. Distortion is introduced as an inequality of one nearest neighbor coupling with the other two. This yields a richer phase diagram by the appearance of a new gapped QSL, a gapless QSL and also a valence bond crystal phase in addition to the previous three phases found for the undistorted model.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Yang, Qu; Wang, Lei; Zhou, Ziyao
To overcome the fundamental challenge of the weak natural response of antiferromagnetic materials under a magnetic field, voltage manipulation of antiferromagnetic interaction is developed to realize ultrafast, high-density, and power efficient antiferromagnetic spintronics. Here, we report a low voltage modulation of Ruderman–Kittel–Kasuya–Yosida (RKKY) interaction via ionic liquid gating in synthetic antiferromagnetic multilayers of FeCoB/Ru/FeCoB and (Pt/Co) 2/Ru/(Co/Pt) 2. At room temperature, the distinct voltage control of transition between antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic ordering is realized and up to 80% of perpendicular magnetic moments manage to switch with a small-applied voltage bias of 2.5 V. We related this ionic liquid gating-induced RKKYmore » interaction modification to the disturbance of itinerant electrons inside synthetic antiferromagnetic heterostructure and the corresponding change of its Fermi level. Voltage tuning of RKKY interaction may enable the next generation of switchable spintronics between antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic modes with both fundamental and practical perspectives.« less
Antiferromagnetic and Orbital Ordering on a Diamond Lattice Near Quantum Criticality
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Plumb, K. W.; Morey, J. R.; Rodriguez-Rivera, J. A.; Wu, Hui; Podlesnyak, A. A.; McQueen, T. M.; Broholm, C. L.
2016-10-01
We present neutron scattering measurements on powder samples of the spinel FeSc2S4 that reveal a previously unobserved magnetic ordering transition occurring at 11.8(2) K. Magnetic ordering occurs subsequent to a subtle cubic-to-tetragonal structural transition that distorts Fe coordinating sulfur tetrahedra and lifts the orbital degeneracy. The orbital ordering is not truly long ranged, but occurs over finite-sized domains that limit magnetic correlation lengths. The application of 1 GPa hydrostatic pressure appears to destabilize this Néel state, reducing the transition temperature to 8.6(8) K and redistributing magnetic spectral weight to higher energies. The relative magnitudes of ordered ⟨m ⟩2=3.1 (2 ) μB2 and fluctuating moments ⟨δ m ⟩=13 (1 ) μB2 show that the magnetically ordered state of FeSc2 S4 is drastically renormalized and close to criticality.
Antiferromagnetic and Orbital Ordering on a Diamond Lattice Near Quantum Criticality
Plumb, K. W.; Morey, J. R.; Rodriguez-Rivera, J. A.; ...
2016-12-01
Here, we present neutron scattering measurements on powder samples of the spinel FeSc 2 S 4 that reveal a previously unobserved magnetic ordering transition occurring at 11.8(2) K. Magnetic ordering occurs subsequent to a subtle cubic-to-tetragonal structural transition that distorts Fe coordinating sulfur tetrahedra and lifts the orbital degeneracy. Furthermore, the orbital ordering is not truly long ranged, but occurs over finite-sized domains that limit magnetic correlation lengths. During the application of 1 GPa hydrostatic pressure appears to destabilize this Néel state, reducing the transition temperature to 8.6(8) K and redistributing magnetic spectral weight to higher energies. The relative magnitudes of ordered 2= 3.1(2) μmore » $$2\\atop{B}$$ and fluctuating moments < δm >= 13(1) μ$$2\\atop{B}$$ show that the magnetically ordered state of FeSc 2 S 4 is drastically renormalized and close to criticality.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gao, S.; Guratinder, K.; Stuhr, U.; White, J. S.; Mansson, M.; Roessli, B.; Fennell, T.; Tsurkan, V.; Loidl, A.; Ciomaga Hatnean, M.; Balakrishnan, G.; Raymond, S.; Chapon, L.; Garlea, V. O.; Savici, A. T.; Cervellino, A.; Bombardi, A.; Chernyshov, D.; Rüegg, Ch.; Haraldsen, J. T.; Zaharko, O.
2018-04-01
In spinels A Cr2O4(A =Mg, Zn), realization of the classical pyrochlore Heisenberg antiferromagnet model is complicated by a strong spin-lattice coupling: the extensive degeneracy of the ground state is lifted by a magneto-structural transition at TN=12.5 K. We study the resulting low-temperature low-symmetry crystal structure by synchrotron x-ray diffraction. The consistent features of x-ray low-temperature patterns are explained by the tetragonal model of Ehrenberg et al. [Pow. Diff. 17, 230 (2002), 10.1154/1.1479738], while other features depend on sample or cooling protocol. A complex, partially ordered magnetic state is studied by neutron diffraction and spherical neutron polarimetry. Multiple magnetic domains of configuration arms of the propagation vectors k1=(1/2 1/2 0 ) ,k2=(1 0 1/2 ) appear. The ordered moment reaches 1.94(3) μB/Cr3 + for k1 and 2.08(3) μB/Cr3 + for k2, if equal amount of the k1 and k2 phases is assumed. The magnetic arrangements have the dominant components along the [110] and [1 -10 ] diagonals and a smaller c component. We use inelastic neutron scattering to investigate the spin excitations, which comprise a mixture of dispersive spin waves propagating from the magnetic Bragg peaks and resonance modes centered at equal energy steps of 4.5 meV. We interpret these as acoustic and optical spin wave branches, but show that the neutron scattering cross sections of transitions within a unit of two corner-sharing tetrahedra match the observed intensity distribution of the resonances. The distinctive fingerprint of clusterlike excitations in the optical spin wave branches suggests that propagating excitations are localized by the complex crystal structure and magnetic orders.
Nonlocally sensing the magnetic states of nanoscale antiferromagnets with an atomic spin sensor
Yan, Shichao; Malavolti, Luigi; Burgess, Jacob A. J.; Droghetti, Andrea; Rubio, Angel; Loth, Sebastian
2017-01-01
The ability to sense the magnetic state of individual magnetic nano-objects is a key capability for powerful applications ranging from readout of ultradense magnetic memory to the measurement of spins in complex structures with nanometer precision. Magnetic nano-objects require extremely sensitive sensors and detection methods. We create an atomic spin sensor consisting of three Fe atoms and show that it can detect nanoscale antiferromagnets through minute, surface-mediated magnetic interaction. Coupling, even to an object with no net spin and having vanishing dipolar stray field, modifies the transition matrix element between two spin states of the Fe atom–based spin sensor that changes the sensor’s spin relaxation time. The sensor can detect nanoscale antiferromagnets at up to a 3-nm distance and achieves an energy resolution of 10 μeV, surpassing the thermal limit of conventional scanning probe spectroscopy. This scheme permits simultaneous sensing of multiple antiferromagnets with a single-spin sensor integrated onto the surface. PMID:28560346
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Metoki, Naoto; Yamauchi, Hiroki; Matsuda, Masaaki
Neutron polarization analysis has been carried out in order to clarify the magnetic structures of multiple order parameter f-electron system NdB 4. We confirmed the noncollinear “all-in all-out” structure (Γ 4) of the in-plane moment, which is in good agreement with our previous neutron powder diffraction study. We found that the magnetic moment along the c-axis m c showed diagonally antiferromagnetic structure (Γ 10), inconsistent with previously reported “vortex” structure (Γ 2). The microscopic mixture of these two structures with →q 0=(0,0,0) appears in phase II and remains stable in phases III and IV, where an incommensurate modulation coexists. Themore » unusual magnetic ordering is phenomenologically understood via Landau theory with the primary order parameter Γ 4 coupled with higher-order secondary order parameter Γ 10. The magnetic moments were estimated to be 1.8 ± 0.2 and 0.2 ± 0.05μ B at T = 7.5K for Γ 4 and Γ 10, respectively. We also found a long-period incommensurate modulation of the →q 1=(0,0,1/2) antiferromagnetic structure of mc with the propagation →q s1=(0.14,0.14,0.1) and →q s2=(0.2,0,0.1) in phase III and IV, respectively. The amplitude of sinusoidal modulation was about m c=1.0 ± 0.2μ B at T=1.5 K. The local (0,0,1/2) structure consists of in-plane ferromagnetic and out-of-plane antiferromagnetic coupling of m c, opposite to the coexisting Γ 10. The mc of Γ 10 is significantly enhanced up to 0.6μ B at T=1.5 K, which is accompanied by the incommensurate modulations. As a result, the Landau phenomenological approach indicates that the higher-order magnetic and/or multipole interactions based on the pseudoquartet f-electron state play important roles.« less
Metoki, Naoto; Yamauchi, Hiroki; Matsuda, Masaaki; ...
2018-05-17
Neutron polarization analysis has been carried out in order to clarify the magnetic structures of multiple order parameter f-electron system NdB 4. We confirmed the noncollinear “all-in all-out” structure (Γ 4) of the in-plane moment, which is in good agreement with our previous neutron powder diffraction study. We found that the magnetic moment along the c-axis m c showed diagonally antiferromagnetic structure (Γ 10), inconsistent with previously reported “vortex” structure (Γ 2). The microscopic mixture of these two structures with →q 0=(0,0,0) appears in phase II and remains stable in phases III and IV, where an incommensurate modulation coexists. Themore » unusual magnetic ordering is phenomenologically understood via Landau theory with the primary order parameter Γ 4 coupled with higher-order secondary order parameter Γ 10. The magnetic moments were estimated to be 1.8 ± 0.2 and 0.2 ± 0.05μ B at T = 7.5K for Γ 4 and Γ 10, respectively. We also found a long-period incommensurate modulation of the →q 1=(0,0,1/2) antiferromagnetic structure of mc with the propagation →q s1=(0.14,0.14,0.1) and →q s2=(0.2,0,0.1) in phase III and IV, respectively. The amplitude of sinusoidal modulation was about m c=1.0 ± 0.2μ B at T=1.5 K. The local (0,0,1/2) structure consists of in-plane ferromagnetic and out-of-plane antiferromagnetic coupling of m c, opposite to the coexisting Γ 10. The mc of Γ 10 is significantly enhanced up to 0.6μ B at T=1.5 K, which is accompanied by the incommensurate modulations. As a result, the Landau phenomenological approach indicates that the higher-order magnetic and/or multipole interactions based on the pseudoquartet f-electron state play important roles.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Pramanick, S.; Chattopadhyay, S.; Giri, S.
2014-08-28
Detailed investigation on the ground-state magnetic properties of Ni{sub 2.04}Mn{sub 1.36}Sn{sub 0.6} alloy is reported. The sample undergoes martensitic type structural transformation from a cubic austenite phase to an orthorhombic martensite phase on cooling around T{sub M} = 220 K. It orders ferromagnetically just above room temperature with T{sub C} = 310 K. The phases above and below T{sub M} are predominantly ferromagnetic, although incipient antiferromagnetic correlations have been mooted between the Mn atoms sitting at two different crystallographic sites. The zero-field-cooled magnetic state shows a step like anomaly around T{sub B} = 100 K, and the sample is found to show clear signature of spin glass like behaviourmore » below this point. It is also associated with considerable exchange bias effect below T{sub B}, where horizontal shift of isothermal magnetization loop is observed in the field-cooled state. Apart from exchange bias, there exists large thermoremanent magnetization. Interestingly, the thermoremanent magnetization obtained by cooling the sample from above and just below the first order martensitic transition failed to show any sizable change, which rules out any major role of field induced arrest across the first order transition. The observed thermoremanent magnetization is presumably due to the effect of pinning of uncompensated spins in this magnetically inhomogeneous system with random ferromagnetic as well as antiferromagnetic bonds on field cooling through the onset point (T{sub B}) of the spin-glass like state.« less
Spin Order and Phase Transitions in Chains of Polariton Condensates.
Ohadi, H; Ramsay, A J; Sigurdsson, H; Del Valle-Inclan Redondo, Y; Tsintzos, S I; Hatzopoulos, Z; Liew, T C H; Shelykh, I A; Rubo, Y G; Savvidis, P G; Baumberg, J J
2017-08-11
We demonstrate that multiply coupled spinor polariton condensates can be optically tuned through a sequence of spin-ordered phases by changing the coupling strength between nearest neighbors. For closed four-condensate chains these phases span from ferromagnetic (FM) to antiferromagnetic (AFM), separated by an unexpected crossover phase. This crossover phase is composed of alternating FM-AFM bonds. For larger eight-condensate chains, we show the critical role of spatial inhomogeneities and demonstrate a scheme to overcome them and prepare any desired spin state. Our observations thus demonstrate a fully controllable nonequilibrium spin lattice.
Exotic states of matter with polariton chains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kalinin, Kirill P.; Lagoudakis, Pavlos G.; Berloff, Natalia G.
2018-04-01
We consider linear periodic chains of exciton-polariton condensates formed by pumping polaritons nonresonantly into a linear network. To the leading order such a sequence of condensates establishes relative phases as to minimize a classical one-dimensional X Y Hamiltonian with nearest and next-to-nearest neighbors. We show that the low-energy states of polaritonic linear chains demonstrate various classical regimes: ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, and frustrated spiral phases where quantum or thermal fluctuations are expected to give rise to a spin-liquid state. At the same time nonlinear interactions at higher pumping intensities bring about phase chaos and novel exotic phases.
Effect of crystalline electric field on heat capacity of LnBaCuFeO5 (Ln = Gd, Ho, Yb)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lal, Surender; Mukherjee, K.; Yadav, C. S.
2018-02-01
Structural, magnetic and thermodynamic properties of layered perovskite compounds LnBaCuFeO5 (Ln = Ho, Gd, Yb) have been investigated. Unlike the iso-structural compound YBaCuFeO5, which shows commensurate antiferromagnetic to incommensurate antiferromagnetic ordering below ∼200 K, the studied compounds do not show any magnetic transition in measured temperature range of 2-350 K. The high temperature heat capacity of the compounds is understood by employing contributions from both optical and acoustic phonons. At low temperature, the observed upturn in the heat capacity is attributed to the Schottky anomaly. The magnetic field dependent heat capacity shows the variation in position of the anomaly with temperature, which appears due to the removal of ground state degeneracy of the rare earth ions, by the crystalline electric field.
Synthesis and characterization of Ca-doped LaMnAsO
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liu, Yong; Straszheim, Warren E.; Das, Pinaki; Islam, Farhan; Heitmann, Thomas W.; McQueeney, Robert J.; Vaknin, David
2018-05-01
We report on our attempt to hole-dope the antiferromagnetic semiconductor LaMnAsO by substitution of the La3 + site by Ca2 +. We use neutron and x-ray diffraction, magnetic susceptibility, and transport techniques to characterize polycrystalline (La1 -xCax)MnAsO samples prepared by solid-state reaction and find that the parent compound is highly resistant to substitution with an upper limit x ≤0.01 . Magnetic susceptibility of the parent and the x =0.002 (xnom=0.04 ) compounds indicate a negligible presence of magnetic impurities (i.e., MnO or MnAs). Rietveld analysis of neutron and x-ray diffraction data shows the preservation of both the tetragonal (P 4 /n m m ) structure upon doping and the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature, TN=355 ±5 K.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Brinckmann, Jan; Woelfle, Peter
2004-11-01
The nearest-neighbor quantum antiferromagnetic (AF) Heisenberg model for spin-1/2 on a two-dimensional square lattice is studied in the auxiliary-fermion representation. Expressing spin operators by canonical fermionic particles requires a constraint on the fermion charge Q{sub i}=1 on each lattice site i, which is imposed approximately through the thermal average. The resulting interacting fermion system is first treated in mean-field theory (MFT), which yields an AF ordered ground state and spin waves in quantitative agreement with conventional spin-wave theory. At finite temperature a self-consistent approximation beyond mean field is required in order to fulfill the Mermin-Wagner theorem. We first discuss amore » fully self-consistent approximation, where fermions are renormalized due to fluctuations of their spin density, in close analogy to FLEX. While static properties like the correlation length, {xi}(T){proportional_to}exp(aJ/T), come out correctly, the dynamical response lacks the magnon-like peaks which would reflect the appearance of short-range order at low T. This drawback, which is caused by overdamping, is overcome in a 'minimal self-consistent approximation' (MSCA), which we derive from the equations of motion. The MSCA features dynamical scaling at small energy and temperature and is qualitatively correct both in the regime of order-parameter relaxation at long wavelengths {lambda}>{xi} and in the short-range-order regime at {lambda}<{xi}. We also discuss the impact of vertex corrections and the problem of pseudo-gap formation in the single-particle density of states due to long-range fluctuations. Finally we show that the (short-range) magnetic order in MFT and MSCA helps to fulfill the constraint on the local fermion occupancy.« less
Nontrivial Berry phase in magnetic BaMnSb2 semimetal
Huang, Silu; Shelton, W. A.; Plummer, E. W.; Jin, Rongying
2017-01-01
The subject of topological materials has attracted immense attention in condensed-matter physics because they host new quantum states of matter containing Dirac, Majorana, or Weyl fermions. Although Majorana fermions can only exist on the surface of topological superconductors, Dirac and Weyl fermions can be realized in both 2D and 3D materials. The latter are semimetals with Dirac/Weyl cones either not tilted (type I) or tilted (type II). Although both Dirac and Weyl fermions have massless nature with the nontrivial Berry phase, the formation of Weyl fermions in 3D semimetals require either time-reversal or inversion symmetry breaking to lift degeneracy at Dirac points. Here we demonstrate experimentally that canted antiferromagnetic BaMnSb2 is a 3D Weyl semimetal with a 2D electronic structure. The Shubnikov–de Hass oscillations of the magnetoresistance give nearly zero effective mass with high mobility and the nontrivial Berry phase. The ordered magnetic arrangement (ferromagnetic ordering in the ab plane and antiferromagnetic ordering along the c axis below 286 K) breaks the time-reversal symmetry, thus offering us an ideal platform to study magnetic Weyl fermions in a centrosymmetric material. PMID:28539436
Magnetoelectric properties of Pb free Bi2FeTiO6: A theoretical investigation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Patra, Lokanath; Ravindran, P.
2018-05-01
The structural, electronic, magnetic and ferroelectric properties of Pb free double perovskite multiferroic Bi2FeTiO6 are investigated using density functional theory within the general gradient approximation (GGA) method. Our structural optimization using total energy calculations for different potential structures show a minimum energy for a non-centrosymmetric rhombohedral structure with R3c space group. Bi2FeTiO6 is found to be an antiferromagnetic insulator with C-type magnetic ordering with bandgap value of 0.3 eV. The calculated magnetic moment of 3.52 μB at Fe site shows the high spin arrangement of 3d electrons which is also confirmed by our orbital projected density of states analysis. We have analyzed the characteristics of bonding present between the constituents of Bi2FeTiO6 with the help of calculated partial density of states and Born effective charges. The ground state of the nearest centrosymmetric structure is found to be a G-type antiferromagnet with half metallicity showing that by the application of external electric field we can not only get a polarized state but also change the magnetic ordering and electronic structure in the present compound indicating strong magnetoelectric coupling. The cation sites the coexistence of Bi 6s lone pair (bring disproportionate charge distribution) and Ti4+ d0 ions which brings covalency produces off-center displacement and favors a non-centrosymmetric ground state and thus ferroelectricity. Our Berry phase calculation gives a polarization of 48 µCcm-2 for Bi2FeTiO6.
Current polarity-dependent manipulation of antiferromagnetic domains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wadley, Peter; Reimers, Sonka; Grzybowski, Michal J.; Andrews, Carl; Wang, Mu; Chauhan, Jasbinder S.; Gallagher, Bryan L.; Campion, Richard P.; Edmonds, Kevin W.; Dhesi, Sarnjeet S.; Maccherozzi, Francesco; Novak, Vit; Wunderlich, Joerg; Jungwirth, Tomas
2018-05-01
Antiferromagnets have several favourable properties as active elements in spintronic devices, including ultra-fast dynamics, zero stray fields and insensitivity to external magnetic fields1. Tetragonal CuMnAs is a testbed system in which the antiferromagnetic order parameter can be switched reversibly at ambient conditions using electrical currents2. In previous experiments, orthogonal in-plane current pulses were used to induce 90° rotations of antiferromagnetic domains and demonstrate the operation of all-electrical memory bits in a multi-terminal geometry3. Here, we demonstrate that antiferromagnetic domain walls can be manipulated to realize stable and reproducible domain changes using only two electrical contacts. This is achieved by using the polarity of the current to switch the sign of the current-induced effective field acting on the antiferromagnetic sublattices. The resulting reversible domain and domain wall reconfigurations are imaged using X-ray magnetic linear dichroism microscopy, and can also be detected electrically. Switching by domain-wall motion can occur at much lower current densities than those needed for coherent domain switching.
Spin dynamics of antiferromagnets in the presence of a homogeneous magnetization
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kirkpatrick, T. R.; Belitz, D.
2017-06-01
We use general hydrodynamic equations to determine the long-wavelength spin excitations in isotropic antiferromagnets in the presence of a homogeneous magnetization. The latter may be induced, such as in antiferromagnets in an external magnetic field, or spontaneous, such as in ferrimagnetic or canted phases that are characterized by the coexistence of antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic order. Depending on the physical situation, we find propagating spin waves that are gapped in some cases and gapless in others, diffusive modes, or relaxational modes. The excitation spectra turn out to be qualitatively different depending on whether or not the homogeneous magnetization is a conserved quantity. The results lay the foundation for a description of a variety of quantum phase transitions, including the transition from a ferromagnetic metal to an antiferromagnetic one, and the spin-flop transitions that are observed in some antiferromagnets. They also are crucial for incorporating weak localization and Altshuler-Aronov effects into the descriptions of quantum phases in both clean and disordered magnetic metals.
Tunable Quantum Spin Liquidity in Mo3O13 Cluster Mott Insulators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Akbari-Sharbaf, Arash; Ziat, Djamel; Verrier, Aime; Quilliam, Jeffrey A.; Sinclair, Ryan; Zhou, Haidong D.; Sun, Xuefeng F.
A study of a tunable quantum spin liquid (QSL) phase in the compound Li2In1- x ScxMo3O8 (x = 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1) will be presented. Crystal structure of these compounds can be viewed as Mo ions arranged on an asymmetric Kagome lattice (KL), with two different Mo-Mo bond lengths, separated by nonmagnetic layers composed of Li, In, and Sc ions. Using X-ray diffraction spectroscopy, muon spin relaxation spectroscopy, bulk magnetic susceptibility and specific heat measurements we show that by changing the composition of the nonmagnetic layers we can drive the system from an ordered antiferromagnetic state to a quantum spin liquid state. The mechanism responsible for the tunability of the magnetic phase in this class of materials may be associated with the degree of asymmetry of the KL controlled by the composition of the nonmagnetic layers. For high degree of asymmetry the constraint on the electronic distribution leads to a configuration of Mo3O8 clusters with net spin-1/2 per cluster arrange on a triangular lattice and long range antiferromagnetic order. For low degree of asymmetry the electronic distribution leads to a magnetic phase with QSL character. We acknowledge support from NSERC and CFREF.
Granovsky, S A; Kreyssig, A; Doerr, M; Ritter, C; Dudzik, E; Feyerherm, R; Canfield, P C; Loewenhaupt, M
2010-06-09
The magnetic structure of GdMn₂Ge₂ (tetragonal I4/mmm) has been studied by hot neutron powder diffraction and x-ray resonant magnetic scattering techniques. These measurements, along with the results of bulk experiments, confirm the collinear ferrimagnetic structure with moment direction parallel to the c-axis below T(C) = 96 K and the collinear antiferromagnetic phase in the temperature region T(C) < T < T(N) = 365 K. In the antiferromagnetic phase, x-ray resonant magnetic scattering has been detected at Mn K and Gd L₂ absorption edges. The Gd contribution is a result of an induced Gd 5d electron polarization caused by the antiferromagnetic order of Mn-moments.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Balaev, D. A.; Popkov, S. I.; Krasikov, A. A.; Balaev, A. D.; Dubrovskiy, A. A.; Stolyar, S. V.; Yaroslavtsev, R. N.; Ladygina, V. P.; Iskhakov, R. S.
2017-10-01
The cross-breeding problem of the temperature dependence of the antiferromagnetic susceptibility of ferrihydrite nanoparticles is considered. Iron ions Fe3+ in ferrihydrite are ordered antiferromagnetically; however, the existence of defects on the surface and in the bulk of nanoparticles induces a noncompensated magnetic moment that leads to a typical superparamagnetic behavior of ensemble of the nanoparticles with a characteristic blocking temperature. In an unblocked state, magnetization curves of such objects are described as a superposition of the Langevin function and the linear-in-field contribution of the antiferromagnetic "core" of the nanoparticles. According to many studies of the magnetization curves performed on ferrihydrite (and related ferritin) nanoparticles in fields to 60 kOe, dependence χAF( T) decreases as temperature increases, which was related before to the superantiferromagnetism effect. As the magnetic field range increases to 250 kOe, the values of χAF obtained from an analysis of the magnetization curves become lower in magnitude; however, the character of the temperature evolution of χAF is changed: now, dependence χAF( T) is an increasing function. The latter is typical for a system of AF particles with random orientation of the crystallographic axes. To correctly determine the antiferromagnetic susceptibility of AF nanoparticles (at least, ferrihydrite) and to search for effects related to the superantiferromagnetism effect, it is necessary to use in experiments the range of magnetic field significantly higher than that the standard value 60 kOe used in most experiments. The study of the temperature evolution of the magnetization curves shows that the observed crossover is due to the existence of small magnetic moments in the samples.
Robust antiferromagnetism preventing superconductivity in pressurized (Ba 0.61K 0.39)Mn 2Bi 2
Gu, Dachun; Dai, Xia; Le, Congcong; ...
2014-12-05
BaMn 2Bi 2 possesses an iso-structure of iron pnictide superconductors and similar antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground state to that of cuprates, therefore, it receives much more attention on its properties and is expected to be the parent compound of a new family of superconductors. When doped with potassium (K), BaMn 2Bi 2 undergoes a transition from an AFM insulator to an AFM metal. Consequently, it is of great interest to suppress the AFM order in the K-doped BaMn 2Bi 2 with the aim of exploring the potential superconductivity. Here, we report that external pressure up to 35.6 GPa cannot suppress themore » AFM order in the K-doped BaMn 2Bi 2 to develop superconductivity in the temperature range of 300 K–1.5 K, but induces a tetragonal (T) to an orthorhombic (OR) phase transition at ~20 GPa. Theoretical calculations for the T and OR phases, on basis of our high-pressure XRD data, indicate that the AFM order is robust in the pressurized Ba 0.61K 0.39Mn 2Bi 2. Utlimately, both of our experimental and theoretical results suggest that the robust AFM order essentially prevents the emergence of superconductivity.« less
Jayasekara, W. T.; Pandey, Abhishek; Kreyssig, A.; ...
2017-02-23
Magnetization, neutron diffraction, and high-energy x-ray diffraction results for Sn-flux grown single-crystal samples of Ca(Co 1–xFe x) yAs 2, 0 ≤ x ≤ 1, 1.86 ≤ y ≤ 2, are presented and reveal that A-type antiferromagnetic order, with ordered moments lying along the c axis, persists for x ≲ 0.12(1). The antiferromagnetic order is smoothly suppressed with increasing x, with both the ordered moment and Néel temperature linearly decreasing. Stripe-type antiferromagnetic order does not occur for x ≤ 0.25, nor does ferromagnetic order for x up to at least x = 0.104, and a smooth crossover from the collapsed-tetragonal (cT)more » phase of CaCo 1.86As 2 to the tetragonal (T) phase of CaFe 2As 2 occurs. Furthermore, these results suggest that hole doping CaCo 1.86As 2 has a less dramatic effect on the magnetism and structure than steric effects due to substituting Sr for Ca.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Jayasekara, W. T.; Pandey, Abhishek; Kreyssig, A.
Magnetization, neutron diffraction, and high-energy x-ray diffraction results for Sn-flux grown single-crystal samples of Ca(Co 1–xFe x) yAs 2, 0 ≤ x ≤ 1, 1.86 ≤ y ≤ 2, are presented and reveal that A-type antiferromagnetic order, with ordered moments lying along the c axis, persists for x ≲ 0.12(1). The antiferromagnetic order is smoothly suppressed with increasing x, with both the ordered moment and Néel temperature linearly decreasing. Stripe-type antiferromagnetic order does not occur for x ≤ 0.25, nor does ferromagnetic order for x up to at least x = 0.104, and a smooth crossover from the collapsed-tetragonal (cT)more » phase of CaCo 1.86As 2 to the tetragonal (T) phase of CaFe 2As 2 occurs. Furthermore, these results suggest that hole doping CaCo 1.86As 2 has a less dramatic effect on the magnetism and structure than steric effects due to substituting Sr for Ca.« less
Magnon Spin Nernst Effect in Antiferromagnets.
Zyuzin, Vladimir A; Kovalev, Alexey A
2016-11-18
We predict that a temperature gradient can induce a magnon-mediated spin Hall response in an antiferromagnet with nontrivial magnon Berry curvature. We develop a linear response theory which gives a general condition for a Hall current to be well defined, even when the thermal Hall response is forbidden by symmetry. We apply our theory to a honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet and discuss a role of magnon edge states in a finite geometry.
Magnon Spin Nernst Effect in Antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zyuzin, Vladimir A.; Kovalev, Alexey A.
2016-11-01
We predict that a temperature gradient can induce a magnon-mediated spin Hall response in an antiferromagnet with nontrivial magnon Berry curvature. We develop a linear response theory which gives a general condition for a Hall current to be well defined, even when the thermal Hall response is forbidden by symmetry. We apply our theory to a honeycomb lattice antiferromagnet and discuss a role of magnon edge states in a finite geometry.
Spiral magnetic order and pressure-induced superconductivity in transition metal compounds.
Wang, Yishu; Feng, Yejun; Cheng, J-G; Wu, W; Luo, J L; Rosenbaum, T F
2016-10-06
Magnetic and superconducting ground states can compete, cooperate and coexist. MnP provides a compelling and potentially generalizable example of a material where superconductivity and magnetism may be intertwined. Using a synchrotron-based non-resonant X-ray magnetic diffraction technique, we reveal a spiral spin order in MnP and trace its pressure evolution towards superconducting order via measurements in a diamond anvil cell. Judging from the magnetostriction, ordered moments vanish at the quantum phase transition as pressure increases the electron kinetic energy. Spins remain local in the disordered phase, and the promotion of superconductivity is likely to emerge from an enhanced coupling to residual spiral spin fluctuations and their concomitant suppression of phonon-mediated superconductivity. As the pitch of the spiral order varies across the 3d transition metal compounds in the MnP family, the magnetic ground state switches between antiferromagnet and ferromagnet, providing an additional tuning parameter in probing spin-fluctuation-induced superconductivity.
Entanglement in a spin- s antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chain
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hao, Xiang; Zhu, Shiqun
2005-10-01
The entanglement in a general Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain of arbitrary spin- s is investigated. The entanglement is witnessed by the thermal energy which equals the minimum energy of any separable state. There is a characteristic temperature below that an entangled thermal state exists. The characteristic temperature for thermal entanglement is increased with spin s . When the total number of lattice is increased, the characteristic temperature decreases and then approaches a constant. This effect shows that the thermal entanglement can be detected in a real solid state system of larger number of lattices for finite temperature. The comparison of negativity and entanglement witness is obtained from the separability of the unentangled states. It is found that the thermal energy provides a sufficient condition for the existence of the thermal entanglement in a spin- s antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chain.
Neutron Scattering Studies on Correlated Transition-Metal Oxides
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhu, Mengze
We have explored the collective phenomena of correlated electrons in two different transition-metal oxides, Ruddlesden-Popper type ruthenates (Sr,Ca) n+1RunO3n+1 and inverse-trirutile chromates Cr2MO6 (M = Te, Mo and W), using neutron scattering in combination with various material characterization methods. (Sr,Ca)n+1RunO 3n+1 are 4d transition-metal oxides exhibiting competing magnetic and electronic tendencies. The delicate balance among the competing states can be readily tuned by perturbations, such as chemical doping and magnetic field, which gives rise to emergent phenomena. We have investigated the effects of 3d transition-metal doping on the magnetic and electronic properties of layered ruthenates. For instance, the single-layer (n = 1) Sr2RuO4 is an unconventional superconductor possessing an incommensurate spin density wave instability with a wave vector qic= (0.3 0.3 L) driven by Fermi surface nesting. Upon Fe substitution, we have unveiled an unexpected commensurate spin density wave order with a propagation vector qc= (0.25 0.25 0) in Sr2Ru1-xFexO 4 (x = 0.03 and 0.05), despite the magnetic fluctuations persisting at qic. The latter feature is corroborated by the first principles calculations, which show that Fe doping barely changes the nesting vector of the Fermi surface. These results suggest that in addition to the known incommensurate magnetic instability, Sr2RuO4 is also in proximity to a commensurate magnetic tendency that can be stabilized via Fe doping. We have also studied the effects of a magnetic field. For example, the bilayer (n = 2) Ca3(Ru1-xTi x)2O7 (x = 0.03) is a G-type antiferromagnetic Mott insulator. We have revealed that a modest magnetic field can lead to colossal magnetoresistance arising from an anomalous collapse of the Mott insulating state. Such an insulator-to-metal transition is accompanied by magnetic and structural transitions. These findings call for deeper theoretical studies to reexamine the magnetic field tuning of Mott systems with magnetic and electronic instabilities, as a magnetic field usually stabilizes the insulating ground state in Mott-Hubbard systems. Cr2MO6 (M = Te, W and Mo) are spin dimer systems with the magnetic ions Cr3+ structurally dimerized favoring a singlet ground state. However, all three compounds investigated exhibit long-range antiferromagnetic orders at low temperature owing to the inter-dimer interactions. We have shown that the inter-dimer exchange coupling can be tuned from antiferromagnetic in Cr2TeO6 to ferromagnetic in Cr2WO6 and Cr2MoO6, by altering the degree of d-p orbital hybridization between W(Mo) and O atoms. The tunability of the inter-dimer interactions without introducing additional complexities such as structural distortions and carrier doping offers a rare opportunity to drive the system toward the quantum critical point (QCP) separating the dimer-based quantum disordered state and the classical long-range antiferromagnetic order. Moreover, we have unraveled Higgs amplitude modes in the magnetic excitation spectra of Cr2TeO6 and Cr2WO6, which are generally believed to survive only in systems close to the QCP where the ordered moment is suppressed significantly from its fully saturated value by quantum fluctuations. However, these two compounds are away from the QCP with the ordered moment reduced only by 24%. This study suggests that Higgs amplitude modes are not the privilege of ordered systems in the vicinity of the QCP, but may be common excitation modes in ordered spin dimer systems.
Doping-dependent charge order correlations in electron-doped cuprates
da Silva Neto, Eduardo H.; Yu, Biqiong; Minola, Matteo; Sutarto, Ronny; Schierle, Enrico; Boschini, Fabio; Zonno, Marta; Bluschke, Martin; Higgins, Joshua; Li, Yangmu; Yu, Guichuan; Weschke, Eugen; He, Feizhou; Le Tacon, Mathieu; Greene, Richard L.; Greven, Martin; Sawatzky, George A.; Keimer, Bernhard; Damascelli, Andrea
2016-01-01
Understanding the interplay between charge order (CO) and other phenomena (for example, pseudogap, antiferromagnetism, and superconductivity) is one of the central questions in the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. The discovery that similar forms of CO exist in both hole- and electron-doped cuprates opened a path to determine what subset of the CO phenomenology is universal to all the cuprates. We use resonant x-ray scattering to measure the CO correlations in electron-doped cuprates (La2−xCexCuO4 and Nd2−xCexCuO4) and their relationship to antiferromagnetism, pseudogap, and superconductivity. Detailed measurements of Nd2−xCexCuO4 show that CO is present in the x = 0.059 to 0.166 range and that its doping-dependent wave vector is consistent with the separation between straight segments of the Fermi surface. The CO onset temperature is highest between x = 0.106 and 0.166 but decreases at lower doping levels, indicating that it is not tied to the appearance of antiferromagnetic correlations or the pseudogap. Near optimal doping, where the CO wave vector is also consistent with a previously observed phonon anomaly, measurements of the CO below and above the superconducting transition temperature, or in a magnetic field, show that the CO is insensitive to superconductivity. Overall, these findings indicate that, although verified in the electron-doped cuprates, material-dependent details determine whether the CO correlations acquire sufficient strength to compete for the ground state of the cuprates. PMID:27536726
Doping-dependent charge order correlations in electron-doped cuprates.
da Silva Neto, Eduardo H; Yu, Biqiong; Minola, Matteo; Sutarto, Ronny; Schierle, Enrico; Boschini, Fabio; Zonno, Marta; Bluschke, Martin; Higgins, Joshua; Li, Yangmu; Yu, Guichuan; Weschke, Eugen; He, Feizhou; Le Tacon, Mathieu; Greene, Richard L; Greven, Martin; Sawatzky, George A; Keimer, Bernhard; Damascelli, Andrea
2016-08-01
Understanding the interplay between charge order (CO) and other phenomena (for example, pseudogap, antiferromagnetism, and superconductivity) is one of the central questions in the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. The discovery that similar forms of CO exist in both hole- and electron-doped cuprates opened a path to determine what subset of the CO phenomenology is universal to all the cuprates. We use resonant x-ray scattering to measure the CO correlations in electron-doped cuprates (La2-x Ce x CuO4 and Nd2-x Ce x CuO4) and their relationship to antiferromagnetism, pseudogap, and superconductivity. Detailed measurements of Nd2-x Ce x CuO4 show that CO is present in the x = 0.059 to 0.166 range and that its doping-dependent wave vector is consistent with the separation between straight segments of the Fermi surface. The CO onset temperature is highest between x = 0.106 and 0.166 but decreases at lower doping levels, indicating that it is not tied to the appearance of antiferromagnetic correlations or the pseudogap. Near optimal doping, where the CO wave vector is also consistent with a previously observed phonon anomaly, measurements of the CO below and above the superconducting transition temperature, or in a magnetic field, show that the CO is insensitive to superconductivity. Overall, these findings indicate that, although verified in the electron-doped cuprates, material-dependent details determine whether the CO correlations acquire sufficient strength to compete for the ground state of the cuprates.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zakrzewski, A. V.; Gangopadhyay, S.; MacDougall, G. J.; Aczel, A. A.; Calder, S.; Williams, T. J.
2018-06-01
In frustrated spinel antiferromagnets, dilution with nonmagnetic ions can be a powerful strategy for probing unconventional spin states or uncovering interesting phenomena. Here, we present x-ray, neutron scattering, and thermodynamic studies of the effects of magnetic dilution of the tetragonally distorted A -site spinel antiferromagnet, CuRh2O4 , with nonmagnetic Zn2 + ions. Our data confirm the helical spin order recently identified at low temperatures in this material, and further demonstrate a systematic suppression of the associated Néel temperature with increasing site dilution towards a continuous transition with critical doping of xspin˜0.44 . Interestingly, this critical doping is demonstrably distinct from a second structural critical point at xJ T˜0.6 , which is consistent with the suppression of orbital order on the A site through a classical percolative mechanism. This anomalously low value for xspin is confirmed via multiple measurements, and is inconsistent with predictions of classical percolation theory, suggesting that the spin transition in this material is driven by an enhancement of preexisting spin fluctuations with weak dilution.
HOPPING CONDUCTIVITY AND MAGNETIC TRANSITIONS OF THE Cu2+ SPINS IN SINGLE-CRYSTAL La2CuO4+y
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Thio, Tineke; Birgeneau, R. J.; Chen, C. Y.; Freer, B. S.; Gabbe, D. R.; Jenssen, H. P.; Kastner, M. A.; Picone, P. J.; Preyer, N. W.
Measurements are reported of the magnetoresistance (MR) for fields up to 23T in La2CuO4+y single crystals in which the Cu2+ spins order antiferromagnetically at TN˜240K, and in which the conductivity at low temperature is characterised by hopping between localised states. Using the MR, we map out the phase diagram of the spin flop transition, observed when the magnetic field is applied parallel to the zero-field staggered magnetisation, and that of the weak-ferromagnetic transition, observed with the field perpendicular to the CuO planes. In both transitions the antiferromagnetic propagation vector changes from the ěca direction at zero field to the ěcc direction at the highest fields. This rather subtle change of the Cu spin ordering is accompanied by a large increase in the interlayer hopping conductivity: up to a factor 2. We show that the magnetoconductance is proportional to the three-dimensional staggered moment with propagation vector in the orthorhombic ěcc direction. The origin of this unusual behaviour is an important unsolved problem.
Hollandites as a new class of multiferroics
Liu, Shuangyi; Akbashev, Andrew R.; Yang, Xiaohao; Liu, Xiaohua; Li, Wanlu; Zhao, Lukas; Li, Xue; Couzis, Alexander; Han, Myung-Geun; Zhu, Yimei; Krusin-Elbaum, Lia; Li, Jackie; Huang, Limin; Billinge, Simon J. L.; Spanier, Jonathan E.; O'Brien, Stephen
2014-01-01
Discovery of new complex oxides that exhibit both magnetic and ferroelectric properties is of great interest for the design of functional magnetoelectrics, in which research is driven by the technologically exciting prospect of controlling charges by magnetic fields and spins by applied voltages, for sensors, 4-state logic, and spintronics. Motivated by the notion of a tool-kit for complex oxide design, we developed a chemical synthesis strategy for single-phase multifunctional lattices. Here, we introduce a new class of multiferroic hollandite Ba-Mn-Ti oxides not apparent in nature. BaMn3Ti4O14.25, designated BMT-134, possesses the signature channel-like hollandite structure, contains Mn4+ and Mn3+ in a 1:1 ratio, exhibits an antiferromagnetic phase transition (TN ~ 120 K) with a weak ferromagnetic ordering at lower temperatures, ferroelectricity, a giant dielectric constant at low frequency and a stable intrinsic dielectric constant of ~200 (1-100 MHz). With evidence of correlated antiferromagnetic and ferroelectric order, the findings point to an unexplored family of structures belonging to the hollandite supergroup with multifunctional properties, and high potential for developing new magnetoelectric materials. PMID:25160888
Unusual behavior of uranium dioxide at high magnetic fields. Part I
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gofryk, K.; Jaime, M.; Zapf, V.; Harrison, N.; Saul, A.; Radtke, G.; Lashley, J. C.; Salamon, M.; Andersson, A. D.; Stanek, C.; Durakiewicz, T.; Smith, J. L.
UO2 is a Mott-Hubbard insulator with well-localized 5 f-electrons and its crystal structure is the face-centered-cubic fluorite. It experiences a first-order antiferromagnetic phase transition at 30.8 K to a non-collinear antiferromagnetic structure that remains a topic of debate. It is believed that the first order nature of the transition results from the competition between the exchange interaction and the Jahn-Teller distortion of oxygen atoms. Despite extensive experimental and theoretical efforts the nature of the competing degrees of freedom and their couplings (such as spin-phonon coupling) are still unclear. Here we present results of our extensive thermodynamic investigations, on well-characterized and oriented single crystals of UO2, focusing on magnetization M(T,H) measurements in DC and pulsed magnetic fields to up 65 T at the NHMFL. Work supported by the Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Sciences, and Engineering Division. The NHMFL Pulsed Field Facility is supported by the NSF, the U.S. D.O.E., and the State of Florida through NSF cooperative Grant DMR.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Raghuvanshi, Nimisha; Singh, Avinash
2010-10-01
Spin waves in the (0, π) and (0, π, π) ordered spin-density-wave (SDW) states of the t-t' Hubbard model are investigated at finite doping. In the presence of small t', these composite ferro-antiferromagnetic (F-AF) states are found to be strongly stabilized at finite hole doping due to enhanced carrier-induced ferromagnetic spin couplings as in metallic ferromagnets. Anisotropic spin-wave velocities, a spin-wave energy scale of around 200 meV, reduced magnetic moment and rapid suppression of magnetic order with electron doping x (corresponding to F substitution of O atoms in LaO1 - xFxFeAs or Ni substitution of Fe atoms in BaFe2 - xNixAs2) obtained in this model are in agreement with observed magnetic properties of doped iron pnictides.
Spin Hall Effects in Metallic Antiferromagnets
Zhang, Wei; Jungfleisch, Matthias B.; Jiang, Wanjun; ...
2014-11-04
In this paper, we investigate four CuAu-I-type metallic antiferromagnets for their potential as spin current detectors using spin pumping and inverse spin Hall effect. Nontrivial spin Hall effects were observed for FeMn, PdMn, and IrMn while a much higher effect was obtained for PtMn. Using thickness-dependent measurements, we determined the spin diffusion lengths of these materials to be short, on the order of 1 nm. The estimated spin Hall angles of the four materials follow the relationship PtMn > IrMn > PdMn > FeMn, highlighting the correlation between the spin-orbit coupling of nonmagnetic species and the magnitude of the spinmore » Hall effect in their antiferromagnetic alloys. These experiments are compared with first-principles calculations. Finally, engineering the properties of the antiferromagnets as well as their interfaces can pave the way for manipulation of the spin dependent transport properties in antiferromagnet-based spintronics.« less
Solitonic Spin-Liquid State Due to the Violation of the Lifshitz Condition in Fe(1+y)Te.
Materne, Ph; Koz, C; Rössler, U K; Doerr, M; Goltz, T; Klauss, H H; Schwarz, U; Wirth, S; Rössler, S
2015-10-23
A combination of phenomenological analysis and Mössbauer spectroscopy experiments on the tetragonal Fe(1+y)Te system indicates that the magnetic ordering transition in compounds with higher Fe excess, y≥0.11, is unconventional. Experimentally, a liquidlike magnetic precursor with quasistatic spin order is found from significantly broadened Mössbauer spectra at temperatures above the antiferromagnetic transition. The incommensurate spin-density wave order in Fe(1+y)Te is described by a magnetic free energy that violates the weak Lifshitz condition in the Landau theory of second-order transitions. The presence of multiple Lifshitz invariants provides the mechanism to create multidimensional, twisted, and modulated solitonic phases.
Solitonic Spin-Liquid State Due to the Violation of the Lifshitz Condition in Fe1 +yTe
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Materne, Ph.; Koz, C.; Rößler, U. K.; Doerr, M.; Goltz, T.; Klauss, H. H.; Schwarz, U.; Wirth, S.; Rößler, S.
2015-10-01
A combination of phenomenological analysis and Mössbauer spectroscopy experiments on the tetragonal Fe1 +yTe system indicates that the magnetic ordering transition in compounds with higher Fe excess, y ≥0.11 , is unconventional. Experimentally, a liquidlike magnetic precursor with quasistatic spin order is found from significantly broadened Mössbauer spectra at temperatures above the antiferromagnetic transition. The incommensurate spin-density wave order in Fe1 +yTe is described by a magnetic free energy that violates the weak Lifshitz condition in the Landau theory of second-order transitions. The presence of multiple Lifshitz invariants provides the mechanism to create multidimensional, twisted, and modulated solitonic phases.
Spin re-orientation in heavy fermion system α - YbAl1 - x FexB4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wu, Shan; Broholm, C.; Kuga, K.; Suzuki, Shintaro; Nakatsuji, S.; Mourigal, M.; Stone, M.; Tian, Wei; Qiu, Y.; Rodriguez-Rivera, Jose
Non centro-symmetric α - YbAlB4 has a heavy Fermi liquid ground state and shares many characteristics with centro-symmetric β - YbAlB4 . Both isomorphs display intermediate valence, associated with a fluctuation scale of T0 = 200 K and a Kondo lattice scale of T* = 8 K. Unlike β - YbAlB4 , α - YbAlB4 is at the boundary of a transition from a Fermi liquid metallic state to an antiferromagnetic (AFM) insulating state, driven by Fe substitution of Al. Magnetization and specific heat measurements reveal two different antiferromagnetic phases with TN = 9 K and TN = 2 K for Fe concentration above and below x =0.07. We report single crystal neutron scattering experiments on Fe doped YbAlB4 with x =0.035 and x =0.125. While the ordering wave vector is identical, k -> = (1 , 0 , 0) , the spin orientation switches from c to a with increasing Fe concentration. This suggests different anisotropic hybridization between 4f and conduction electrons that we confirmed by determining the crystal field levels. Supported by DOE, BES through DE-FG02-08ER46544.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, C. L.; Tsuda, S.; Umeo, K.; Yamane, Y.; Onimaru, T.; Takabatake, T.; Kikugawa, N.; Terashima, T.; Uji, S.
2017-07-01
CeRhSn with a quasikagome lattice of Ce atoms in the hexagonal c plane has been expected to be in close vicinity to a zero-field quantum criticality derived from magnetic frustration. We have studied how the ground state changes with substitution of Pd for Rh in CeR h1 -xP dxSn (x ≤0.75 ) by measuring the specific heat C , magnetic susceptibilities χdc and χac, magnetization M , electrical resistivity ρ, and magnetoresistance. For x =0 , the field dependence of χac at T =0.03 K shows a peak at B ∥a =3.5 T , confirming the spin-flop crossover in the field applied along the hard axis. The temperature dependence of χac shows a broad maximum at 0.1 K whereas C /T continues to increase down to 0.08 K. For x ≧0.1 ,ρ (T ) is dominated by incoherent Kondo scattering and both C /T and χac(T ) exhibit peaks, indicating the development of an antiferromagnetic order. The ordering temperature rises to 2.5 K as x is increased to 0.75. Our results indicate that the ground state in the quasikagome Kondo lattice CeR h1 -xP dxSn leaves the quantum critical point at x =0 with increasing x as a consequence of suppression of both the magnetic frustration and Kondo effect.
Two-peak structure in the K-edge RIXS spectra of a spatially frustrated Heisenberg antiferromagnet
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Datta, Trinanjan; Luo, Cheng; Yao, Dao-Xin
2014-03-01
Quantum fluctuations due to spatial anisotropy and strong magnetic frustration lead to the formation of a two-peak structure in the K-edge bimagnon RIXS intensity spectra of a Jx-Jy-J2 Heisenberg model on a square lattice. We compute the RIXS intensity, including up to first order 1/S spin wave expansion correction, using the Bethe-Salpeter equation within the ladder approximation scheme. The two-peak feature occurs in both the antiferromagnetic phase and the collinear antiferromagnetic phase. A knowledge of the peak splitting energy from both magnetically ordered regime can provide experimentalists with an alternative means to measure and study the effects of local microscopic exchange constants. Cottrell Research Corporation, NSFC-11074310, NSFC-11275279, Specialized Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education.
Unified molecular field theory for collinear and noncollinear Heisenberg antiferromagnets
Johnston, David C.
2015-02-27
In this study, a unified molecular field theory (MFT) is presented that applies to both collinear and planar noncollinear Heisenberg antiferromagnets (AFs) on the same footing. The spins in the system are assumed to be identical and crystallographically equivalent. This formulation allows calculations of the anisotropic magnetic susceptibility χ versus temperature T below the AF ordering temperature T N to be carried out for arbitrary Heisenberg exchange interactions J ij between arbitrary neighbors j of a given spin i without recourse to magnetic sublattices. The Weiss temperature θ p in the Curie-Weiss law is written in terms of the Jmore » ij values and T N in terms of the J ij values and an assumed AF structure. Other magnetic and thermal properties are then expressed in terms of quantities easily accessible from experiment as laws of corresponding states for a given spin S. For collinear ordering these properties are the reduced temperature t=T/T N, the ratio f = θ p/T N, and S. For planar noncollinear helical or cycloidal ordering, an additional parameter is the wave vector of the helix or cycloid. The MFT is also applicable to AFs with other AF structures. The MFT predicts that χ(T ≤ T N) of noncollinear 120° spin structures on triangular lattices is isotropic and independent of S and T and thus clarifies the origin of this universally observed behavior. The high-field magnetization and heat capacity for fields applied perpendicular to the ordering axis (collinear AFs) and ordering plane (planar noncollinear AFs) are also calculated and expressed for both types of AF structures as laws of corresponding states for a given S, and the reduced perpendicular field versus reduced temperature phase diagram is constructed.« less
Unified molecular field theory for collinear and noncollinear Heisenberg antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Johnston, David C.
2015-02-01
A unified molecular field theory (MFT) is presented that applies to both collinear and planar noncollinear Heisenberg antiferromagnets (AFs) on the same footing. The spins in the system are assumed to be identical and crystallographically equivalent. This formulation allows calculations of the anisotropic magnetic susceptibility χ versus temperature T below the AF ordering temperature TN to be carried out for arbitrary Heisenberg exchange interactions Ji j between arbitrary neighbors j of a given spin i without recourse to magnetic sublattices. The Weiss temperature θp in the Curie-Weiss law is written in terms of the Ji j values and TN in terms of the Ji j values and an assumed AF structure. Other magnetic and thermal properties are then expressed in terms of quantities easily accessible from experiment as laws of corresponding states for a given spin S . For collinear ordering these properties are the reduced temperature t =T /TN , the ratio f =θp/TN , and S . For planar noncollinear helical or cycloidal ordering, an additional parameter is the wave vector of the helix or cycloid. The MFT is also applicable to AFs with other AF structures. The MFT predicts that χ (T ≤TN) of noncollinear 120∘ spin structures on triangular lattices is isotropic and independent of S and T and thus clarifies the origin of this universally observed behavior. The high-field magnetization and heat capacity for fields applied perpendicular to the ordering axis (collinear AFs) and ordering plane (planar noncollinear AFs) are also calculated and expressed for both types of AF structures as laws of corresponding states for a given S , and the reduced perpendicular field versus reduced temperature phase diagram is constructed.
Genesis of charge orders in high temperature superconductors
Tu, Wei-Lin; Lee, Ting-Kuo
2016-01-01
One of the most puzzling facts about cuprate high-temperature superconductors in the lightly doped regime is the coexistence of uniform superconductivity and/or antiferromagnetism with many low-energy charge-ordered states in a unidirectional charge density wave or a bidirectional checkerboard structure. Recent experiments have discovered that these charge density waves exhibit different symmetries in their intra-unit-cell form factors for different cuprate families. Using a renormalized mean-field theory for a well-known, strongly correlated model of cuprates, we obtain a number of charge-ordered states with nearly degenerate energies without invoking special features of the Fermi surface. All of these self-consistent solutions have a pair density wave intertwined with a charge density wave and sometimes a spin density wave. Most of these states vanish in the underdoped regime, except for one with a large d-form factor that vanishes at approximately 19% doping of the holes, as reported by experiments. Furthermore, these states could be modified to have a global superconducting order, with a nodal-like density of states at low energy. PMID:26732076
Ising antiferromagnet on a finite triangular lattice with free boundary conditions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kim, Seung-Yeon
2015-11-01
The exact integer values for the density of states of the Ising model on an equilateral triangular lattice with free boundary conditions are evaluated up to L = 24 spins on a side for the first time by using the microcanonical transfer matrix. The total number of states is 2 N s = 2300 ≈ 2.037 × 1090 for L = 24, where N s = L( L+1)/2 is the number of spins. Classifying all 2300 spin states according to their energy values is an enormous work. From the density of states, the exact partition function zeros in the complex temperature plane of the triangular-lattice Ising model are evaluated. Using the density of states and the partition function zeros, we investigate the properties of the triangularlattice Ising antiferromagnet. The scaling behavior of the ground-state entropy and the form of the correlation length at T = 0 are studied for the triangular-lattice Ising antiferromagnet with free boundary conditions. Also, the scaling behavior of the Fisher edge singularity is investigated.
Pressure–Temperature Phase Diagram Reveals Spin–Lattice Interactions in Co[N(CN) 2 ] 2
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Musfeldt, J. L.; O’Neal, K. R.; Brinzari, T. V.
2017-04-07
Diamond anvil cell techniques, synchrotron-based infrared and Raman spectroscopies, and lattice dynamics calculations are combined with prior magnetic property work to reveal the pressure–temperature phase diagram of Co[N(CN)2]2. The second-order structural boundaries converge on key areas of activity involving the spin state exposing how the pressure-induced local lattice distortions trigger the ferromagnetic → antiferromagnetic transition in this quantum material.
Magnetic state selected by magnetic dipole interaction in the kagome antiferromagnet NaBa2Mn3F11
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hayashida, Shohei; Ishikawa, Hajime; Okamoto, Yoshihiko; Okubo, Tsuyoshi; Hiroi, Zenji; Avdeev, Maxim; Manuel, Pascal; Hagihala, Masato; Soda, Minoru; Masuda, Takatsugu
2018-02-01
We haved studied the ground state of the classical kagome antiferromagnet NaBa2Mn3F11 . Strong magnetic Bragg peaks observed for d spacings shorter than 6.0 Å were indexed by the propagation vector of k0=(0 ,0 ,0 ) . Additional peaks with weak intensities in the d -spacing range above 8.0 Å were indexed by the incommensurate vector of k1=[0.3209 (2 ) ,0.3209 (2 ) ,0 ] and k2=[0.3338 (4 ) ,0.3338 (4 ) ,0 ] . Magnetic structure analysis unveils a 120∘ structure with the tail-chase geometry having k0 modulated by the incommensurate vector. A classical calculation of the Heisenberg kagome antiferromagnet with antiferromagnetic second-neighbor interaction, for which the ground state a k0120∘ degenerated structure, reveals that the magnetic dipole-dipole (MDD) interaction including up to the fourth neighbor terms selects the tail-chase structure. The observed modulation of the tail-chase structure is attributed to a small perturbation such as the long-range MDD interaction or the interlayer interaction.
Computational study of Zn-doped quantum spin chains and ladders
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Laukamp, Markus
In this dissertation, the powerful Density Matrix Renormalization Group method is applied to examine the properties of spin models. The method allows to determine accurately the properties of low lying states of finite systems of large sizes. The results gained with this technique are compared to results generated with exact diagonalization and Monte Carlo techniques. Spin models have been proposed to describe dimerized chains, ladders, two dimensional antiferromagnets, and other compounds. Here the focus is on the case where some spins are replaced by spinless vacancies. This happens e.g. upon Zn doping, when Cusp{2+} atoms are replaced by Znsp{2+}. A small percentage of vacancies rapidly destroys the spin gap, and their presence induces enhanced antiferromagnetic correlations near those vacancies. Since the phenomenon of enhanced antiferromagnetism is found to occur in several models and cluster geometries, a common simple explanation for its presence may exist. In this thesis it is argued that the resonating-valence-bond character of the spin correlations at short distances of a large variety of models is responsible for the presence of robust staggered spin correlations near vacancies and lattice edges. The phenomenon takes place regardless of the long distance properties of the ground state, and it is caused by a "pruning" of the available spin singlets in the vicinity of the vacancies. The effect produces a broadening of the low temperature NMR signal for the compounds analyzed here. This broadening should be experimentally observable in the structurally dimerized chain systems Cu(NOsb3)sb{*}2.5Hsb2O,\\ CuWOsb4,\\ (VO)sb2Psb2Osb7, and Srsb{14}Cusb{24}Osb{41}, in ladder materials such as SrCusb2Osb3, in the spin-Peierls systems CuGeOsb3 and NaVsb2Osb5, and in several others since it is a universal effect common to a wide variety of models and compounds. In addition, it is argued that the Neel order observed in SrCusb2Osb3 upon Zn doping is induced by the local antiferromagnetic order discussed in this paper, enhanced by a favorable ratio between the actual Heisenberg couplings along chains and rungs, as reported in recent experimental literature. Based on this reasoning it is here predicted that other ladder materials such as Zn-doped Cusb2(Csb5Hsb{12}Nsb2)sb2Clsb4 will not present Neel order at small Zn concentrations.
Strain effect on magnetic property of antiferromagnetic insulator SmFeO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kuroda, M.; Tanahashi, N.; Hajiri, T.; Ueda, K.; Asano, H.
2018-05-01
Thin films and heterostructures of antiferromagnetic insulator SmFeO3 were fabricated on LaAlO3 (001) substrates by magnetron sputtering, and their structural, magnetic properties were investigated. It was found that epitaxially strained thin films showed a pronounced magnetic anisotropy with the enhanced magnetization up to 65 emu/cc, which is approximately ten times larger than the bulk value. The observed enhancement of magnetization was considered to be due to the lattice distortion and the non-collinear antiferromagnetic spin ordering of SmFeO3.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baltz, V.; Manchon, A.; Tsoi, M.; Moriyama, T.; Ono, T.; Tserkovnyak, Y.
2018-01-01
Antiferromagnetic materials could represent the future of spintronic applications thanks to the numerous interesting features they combine: they are robust against perturbation due to magnetic fields, produce no stray fields, display ultrafast dynamics, and are capable of generating large magnetotransport effects. Intense research efforts over the past decade have been invested in unraveling spin transport properties in antiferromagnetic materials. Whether spin transport can be used to drive the antiferromagnetic order and how subsequent variations can be detected are some of the thrilling challenges currently being addressed. Antiferromagnetic spintronics started out with studies on spin transfer and has undergone a definite revival in the last few years with the publication of pioneering articles on the use of spin-orbit interactions in antiferromagnets. This paradigm shift offers possibilities for radically new concepts for spin manipulation in electronics. Central to these endeavors are the need for predictive models, relevant disruptive materials, and new experimental designs. This paper reviews the most prominent spintronic effects described based on theoretical and experimental analysis of antiferromagnetic materials. It also details some of the remaining bottlenecks and suggests possible avenues for future research. This review covers both spin-transfer-related effects, such as spin-transfer torque, spin penetration length, domain-wall motion, and "magnetization" dynamics, and spin-orbit related phenomena, such as (tunnel) anisotropic magnetoresistance, spin Hall, and inverse spin galvanic effects. Effects related to spin caloritronics, such as the spin Seebeck effect, are linked to the transport of magnons in antiferromagnets. The propagation of spin waves and spin superfluids in antiferromagnets is also covered.
Evidence for a gapped spin-liquid ground state in a kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Fu, Mingxuan; Imai, Takahashi; Han, Tian -Heng
2015-11-06
Here, the kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet is a leading candidate in the search for a spin system with a quantum spin-liquid ground state. The nature of its ground state remains a matter of active debate. We conducted oxygen-17 single-crystal nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements of the spin-1/2 kagome lattice in herbertsmithite [ZnCu 3(OH) 6Cl 2], which is known to exhibit a spinon continuum in the spin excitation spectrum. We demonstrated that the intrinsic local spin susceptibility χkagome, deduced from the oxygen-17 NMR frequency shift, asymptotes to zero below temperatures of 0.03J, where J ~ 200 kelvin is the copper-copper superexchange interaction.more » Combined with the magnetic field dependence of χ kagome that we observed at low temperatures, these results imply that the kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet has a spin-liquid ground state with a finite gap.« less
Ferroelectric ferrimagnetic LiFe2F6 : Charge-ordering-mediated magnetoelectricity
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lin, Ling-Fang; Xu, Qiao-Ru; Zhang, Yang; Zhang, Jun-Jie; Liang, Yan-Ping; Dong, Shuai
2017-12-01
Trirutile-type LiFe2F6 is a charge-ordered material with an Fe2 +/Fe3 + configuration. Here, its physical properties, including magnetism, electronic structure, phase transition, and charge ordering, are studied theoretically. On one hand, the charge ordering leads to improper ferroelectricity with a large polarization. On the other hand, its magnetic ground state can be tuned from the antiferromagnetic to ferrimagnetic by moderate compressive strain. Thus, LiFe2F6 can be a rare multiferroic with both large magnetization and polarization. Most importantly, since the charge ordering is the common ingredient for both ferroelectricity and magnetization, the net magnetization may be fully switched by flipping the polarization, rendering intrinsically strong magnetoelectric effects and desirable functions.
Weyl magnons in noncoplanar stacked kagome antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Owerre, S. A.
2018-03-01
Weyl nodes have been experimentally realized in photonic, electronic, and phononic crystals. However, magnonic Weyl nodes are yet to be seen experimentally. In this paper, we propose Weyl magnon nodes in noncoplanar stacked frustrated kagome antiferromagnets, naturally available in various real materials. Most crucially, the Weyl nodes in the current system occur at the lowest excitation and possess a topological thermal Hall effect, therefore they are experimentally accessible at low temperatures due to the population effect of bosonic quasiparticles. In stark contrast to other magnetic systems, the current Weyl nodes do not rely on time-reversal symmetry breaking by the magnetic order. Rather, they result from explicit macroscopically broken time reversal symmetry by the scalar spin chirality of noncoplanar spin textures and can be generalized to chiral spin liquid states. Moreover, the scalar spin chirality gives a real space Berry curvature which is not available in previously studied magnetic Weyl systems. We show the existence of magnon arc surface states connecting projected Weyl magnon nodes on the surface Brillouin zone. We also uncover the first realization of triply-degenerate nodal magnon point in the noncollinear regime with zero scalar spin chirality.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mazzucchi, Gabriel; Caballero-Benitez, Santiago F.; Mekhov, Igor B.
2016-08-01
Ultracold atomic systems offer a unique tool for understanding behavior of matter in the quantum degenerate regime, promising studies of a vast range of phenomena covering many disciplines from condensed matter to quantum information and particle physics. Coupling these systems to quantized light fields opens further possibilities of observing delicate effects typical of quantum optics in the context of strongly correlated systems. Measurement backaction is one of the most funda- mental manifestations of quantum mechanics and it is at the core of many famous quantum optics experiments. Here we show that quantum backaction of weak measurement can be used for tailoring long-range correlations of ultracold fermions, realizing quantum states with spatial modulations of the density and magnetization, thus overcoming usual requirement for a strong interatomic interactions. We propose detection schemes for implementing antiferromagnetic states and density waves. We demonstrate that such long-range correlations cannot be realized with local addressing, and they are a consequence of the competition between global but spatially structured backaction of weak quantum measurement and unitary dynamics of fermions.
Magnetic dilution and domain selection in the X Y pyrochlore antiferromagnet Er2Ti2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gaudet, J.; Hallas, A. M.; Maharaj, D. D.; Buhariwalla, C. R. C.; Kermarrec, E.; Butch, N. P.; Munsie, T. J. S.; Dabkowska, H. A.; Luke, G. M.; Gaulin, B. D.
2016-08-01
Below TN=1.1 K, the X Y pyrochlore Er2Ti2O7 orders into a k =0 noncollinear, antiferromagnetic structure referred to as the ψ2 state. The magnetic order in Er2Ti2O7 is known to obey conventional three-dimensional (3D) percolation in the presence of magnetic dilution, and in that sense is robust to disorder. Recently, however, two theoretical studies have predicted that the ψ2 structure should be unstable to the formation of a related ψ3 magnetic structure in the presence of magnetic vacancies. To investigate these theories, we have carried out systematic elastic and inelastic neutron scattering studies of three single crystals of Er2 -xYxTi2O7 with x =0 (pure), 0.2 (10 %Y ) and 0.4 (20 % Y ), where magnetic Er3 + is substituted by nonmagnetic Y3 +. We find that the ψ2 ground state of pure Er2Ti2O7 is significantly affected by magnetic dilution. The characteristic domain selection associated with the ψ2 state, and the corresponding energy gap separating ψ2 from ψ3, vanish for Y3 + substitutions between 10 % Y and 20 % Y , far removed from the three-dimensional percolation threshold of ˜60 % Y . The resulting ground state for Er2Ti2O7 with magnetic dilutions from 20 % Y up to the percolation threshold is naturally interpreted as a frozen mosaic of ψ2 and ψ3 domains.
Synthesis and characterization of Ca-doped LaMnAsO
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Liu, Yong; Straszheim, Warren E.; Das, Pinaki
Here, we report on our attempt to hole-dope the antiferromagnetic semiconductor LaMnAsO by substitution of the La 3+ site by Ca 2+. We use neutron and x-ray diffraction, magnetic susceptibility, and transport techniques to characterize polycrystalline (La 1–xCa x)MnAsO samples prepared by solid-state reaction and find that the parent compound is highly resistant to substitution with an upper limit x ≤ 0.01. Magnetic susceptibility of the parent and the x = 0.002(x nom = 0.04) compounds indicate a negligible presence of magnetic impurities (i.e., MnO or MnAs). Rietveld analysis of neutron and x-ray diffraction data shows the preservation of bothmore » the tetragonal (P4/nmm) structure upon doping and the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature, T N = 355 ± 5 K.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Joe, Minwoong; Lee, Hosik; Menderes Alyörük, M.; Lee, Jinhwan; Youb Kim, Sung; Lee, Changgu; Lee, Jun Hee
2017-10-01
We performed first-principles calculations to investigate the magnetic, mechanical and electronic properties of the tetrachalcogenide CrPS4. Although bulk CrPS4 has been shown to exhibit a low-dimensional antiferromagnetic (AFM) ground state where ferromagnetic (FM) Cr-chains are coupled antiferromagnetically, our calculations indicated that the monolayer can be transformed to an FM material by applying a uniaxial tensile strain of ⩾4% along the FM Cr-chain direction. The AFM-to-FM transition is explained to be driven by an increase of the exchange interaction induced by a decrease in the distance between the FM Cr-chains. A huge nonlinear piezomagnetism was predicted at the strain-induced magnetic phase boundary. Our study provides insight about rational design of single-layer magnetic materials for a wide range of spintronic devices and energy applications.
Crystal-field effects in the kagome antiferromagnet Ho3Ru4Al12
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gorbunov, D. I.; Nomura, T.; Ishii, I.; Henriques, M. S.; Andreev, A. V.; Doerr, M.; Stöter, T.; Suzuki, T.; Zherlitsyn, S.; Wosnitza, J.
2018-05-01
In Ho3Ru4Al12 , the Ho atoms form a distorted kagome lattice. We performed magnetization, magnetic-susceptibility, specific-heat, and ultrasound measurements on a single crystal. We find that the magnetic and magnetoelastic properties of Ho3Ru4Al12 result from an interplay between geometric frustration and crystal-electric-field (CEF) effects. The Ho atoms order antiferromagnetically at TN=4.5 K with reduced magnetic moments. In applied field, the magnetization shows anomalies that can be explained by CEF level crossings. We propose a CEF level scheme for which the ground-state doublet and the first two excited singlets at about 2.7 K form a quasiquartet. Indirect interlevel transitions allow for a quadrupolar interaction. This interaction explains well changes in the elastic shear modulus C44 as a function of temperature and magnetic field.
Synthesis and characterization of Ca-doped LaMnAsO
Liu, Yong; Straszheim, Warren E.; Das, Pinaki; ...
2018-05-18
Here, we report on our attempt to hole-dope the antiferromagnetic semiconductor LaMnAsO by substitution of the La 3+ site by Ca 2+. We use neutron and x-ray diffraction, magnetic susceptibility, and transport techniques to characterize polycrystalline (La 1–xCa x)MnAsO samples prepared by solid-state reaction and find that the parent compound is highly resistant to substitution with an upper limit x ≤ 0.01. Magnetic susceptibility of the parent and the x = 0.002(x nom = 0.04) compounds indicate a negligible presence of magnetic impurities (i.e., MnO or MnAs). Rietveld analysis of neutron and x-ray diffraction data shows the preservation of bothmore » the tetragonal (P4/nmm) structure upon doping and the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature, T N = 355 ± 5 K.« less
Spintronics with multiferroics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Béa, H.; Gajek, M.; Bibes, M.; Barthélémy, A.
2008-10-01
In this paper, we review the recent research on the functionalization of multiferroics for spintronics applications. We focus more particularly on antiferromagnetic and ferroelectric BiFeO3 and its integration in several types of architectures. For instance, when used as a tunnel barrier, BiFeO3 allows the observation of a large tunnel magnetoresistance with Co and (La,Sr)MnO3 ferromagnetic electrodes. Also, its antiferromagnetic and magnetoelectric properties have been exploited to induce an exchange coupling with a ferromagnet. The mechanisms of such an exchange coupling open ways to electrically control magnetization and possibly the logic state of spintronics devices. We also discuss recent results concerning the use of ferromagnetic and ferroelectric (La,Bi)MnO3 as an active tunnel barrier in magnetic tunnel junctions with Au and (La,Sr)MnO3 electrodes. A four-resistance-state device has been obtained, with two states arising from a spin filtering effect due to the ferromagnetic character of the barrier and two resulting from the ferroelectric behavior of the (La,Bi)MnO3 ultrathin film. These results show that the additional degree of freedom provided by the ferroelectric polarization brings novel functionalities to spintronics, either as a extra order parameter for multiple-state memory elements, or as a handle for gate-controlled magnetic memories.
Revealing hidden antiferromagnetic correlations in doped Hubbard chains via string correlators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hilker, Timon A.; Salomon, Guillaume; Grusdt, Fabian; Omran, Ahmed; Boll, Martin; Demler, Eugene; Bloch, Immanuel; Gross, Christian
2017-08-01
Topological phases, like the Haldane phase in spin-1 chains, defy characterization through local order parameters. Instead, nonlocal string order parameters can be employed to reveal their hidden order. Similar diluted magnetic correlations appear in doped one-dimensional lattice systems owing to the phenomenon of spin-charge separation. Here we report on the direct observation of such hidden magnetic correlations via quantum gas microscopy of hole-doped ultracold Fermi-Hubbard chains. The measurement of nonlocal spin-density correlation functions reveals a hidden finite-range antiferromagnetic order, a direct consequence of spin-charge separation. Our technique, which measures nonlocal order directly, can be readily extended to higher dimensions to study the complex interplay between magnetic order and density fluctuations.
Lee, I J; Brown, S E; Yu, W; Naughton, M J; Chaikin, P M
2005-05-20
We report simultaneous NMR and electrical transport experiments in the pressure range near the boundary of the antiferromagnetic spin density wave (SDW) insulator and the metallic/superconducting (SC) phase in (TMTSF)2PF6. Measurements indicate a tricritical point separating a line of second-order SDW/metal transitions from a line of first-order SDW/metal(SC) transitions with coexistence of macroscopic regions of SDW and metal(SC) order, with little mutual interaction but strong hysteretic effects. NMR results quantify the fraction of each phase.
Electron energy spectrum and magnetic interactions in high-Tc superconductors
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Turshevski, S. A.; Liechtenstein, A. I.; Antropov, V. P.; Gubanov, V. A.
1991-01-01
The character of magnetic interactions in La-Sr-Cu-O and Y-Ba-Cu-O systems is of primary importance for analysis of high-T(sub c) superconductivity in these compounds. Neutron diffraction experiments showed the antiferromagnetic ground state for nonsuperconducting La2CuO4 and YBa2Cu3O6 with the strongest antiferromagnetic superexchange being in the ab plane. The nonsuperconducting '1-2-3' system has two Neel temperatures T(sub N1) and T(sub N2). The first one corresponds to the ordering of Cu atoms in the CuO2 planes; T(sub N2) reflects the antiferromagnetic ordering of magnetic moments in CuO chains relatively to the moments in the planes T(sub N1) and T(sub N2) which depend strongly on the oxygen content. Researchers describe magnetic interactions in high-T superconductors based on the Linear Muffin-Tin Orbitals (LMTO) band structure calculations. Exchange interaction parameters can be defined from the effective Heisenberg Hamiltonian. When the magnetic moments are not too large, as copper magnetic moments in superconducting oxides, J(sub ij) parameters can be defined through the non-local magnetic susceptibility of spin restricted solution for the crystal. The results of nonlocal magnetic susceptibility calculations and the values of exchange interaction parameters for La CuO and YBa2Cu3O7 systems are given in tabular form. Strong anisotropy of exchange interactions in the ab plane and along the c axis in La2CuO4 is obviously seen. The value of Neel temperature found agrees well with the experimental data available. In the planes of '1-2-3' system there are quite strong antiferromagnetic Cu-O and O-O interaction which appear due to holes in oxygen subbands. These results are in line with the magnetic model of oxygen holes pairing in high-T(sub c) superconductors.
Electron energy spectrum and magnetic interactions in high-T(sub c) superconductors
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Turshevski, S. A.; Liechtenstein, A. I.; Antropov, V. P.; Gubanov, V. A.
1990-01-01
The character of magnetic interactions in La-Sr-Cu-O and Y-Ba-Cu-O systems is of primary importance for analysis of high-T(sub c) superconductivity in these compounds. Neutron diffraction experiments showed the antiferromagnetic ground state for nonsuperconducting La2CuO4 and YBa2Cu3O6 with the strongest antiferromagnetic superexchange being in the ab plane. The nonsuperconducting '1-2-3' system has two Neel temperatures T sub N1 and T sub N2. The first one corresponds to the ordering of Cu atoms in the CuO2 planes; T sub N2 reflects the antiferromagnetic ordering of magnetic moments in CuO chains relatively to the moments in the planes T sub N1 and T sub N2 depend strongly on the oxygen content. Researchers describe magnetic interactions in high-T superconductors based on the Linear Muffin-Tin Orbitals (LMTO) band structure calculations. Exchange interaction parameters can be defined from the effective Heisenberg hamiltonian. When the magnetic moments are not too large, as copper magnetic moments in superconducting oxides, J sub ij parameters can be defined through the non-local magnetic susceptibility of spin restricted solution for the crystal. The results of nonlocal magnetic susceptibility calculations and the values of exchange interaction parameters for La CuO and YBa2Cu3O7 systems are given in tabular form. Strong anisotropy of exchange interactions in the ab plane and along the c axis in La2CuO4 is obviously seen. The value of Neel temperature found agrees well with the experimental data available. In the planes of '1-2-3' system there are quite strong antiferromagnetic Cu-O and O-O interaction which appear due to holes in oxygen subbands. These results are in line with the magnetic model of oxygen holes pairing in high-T(sub c) superconductors.
DMRG study of the Kagome Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yan, Simeng; White, Steven
2010-03-01
We have used DMRG to study the S=1/2 Heisenberg model on the Kagome lattice, using cylindrical boundary conditions and large clusters. We have focused on the spin gap and the presence or absence of the Valence Bond Crystal (VBC) order with a 36 unit cell as studied by Marston and Zeng, Singh and Huse, and others. Our results are probably the highest accuracy results for large clusters to date. Our extrapolated results find a finite spin gap with a value of about 0.05 J. To determine whether VBC order occurs, we calculated the ground states of a variety of clusters, some of which allow the 36 site VBC order, and others which do not allow it. For narrower cylinders (width < 12) , the VBC patterns are found to vanish as the number of kept states increases. For wider systems, we do observe VBC ground states, but it is not always clear that the calculations have converged. The extrapolated energies of the two types of states are very close, within about 1%.
Magnetic Ground State Stabilized by Three-Site Interactions: Fe /Rh (111 )
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Krönlein, Andreas; Schmitt, Martin; Hoffmann, Markus; Kemmer, Jeannette; Seubert, Nicolai; Vogt, Matthias; Küspert, Julia; Böhme, Markus; Alonazi, Bandar; Kügel, Jens; Albrithen, Hamad A.; Bode, Matthias; Bihlmayer, Gustav; Blügel, Stefan
2018-05-01
We report the direct observation of a theoretically predicted magnetic ground state in a monolayer Fe on Rh(111), which is referred to as an up-up-down-down (↑↑↓↓) double-row-wise antiferromagnetic spin structure, using spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy. This exotic phase, which exists in three orientational domains, is revealed by experiments with magnetic probe tips performed in external magnetic fields. It is shown that a hitherto unconsidered four-spin-three-site beyond-Heisenberg interaction distinctly contributes to the spin coupling of atoms with S ≥1 spins. The observation of the ↑↑↓↓ order substantiates the presence of higher-order, in particular, three-site interactions, in thin magnetic films of itinerant magnets.
Identifying Two-Dimensional Z 2 Antiferromagnetic Topological Insulators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bègue, F.; Pujol, P.; Ramazashvili, R.
2018-01-01
We revisit the question of whether a two-dimensional topological insulator may arise in a commensurate Néel antiferromagnet, where staggered magnetization breaks the symmetry with respect to both elementary translation and time reversal, but retains their product as a symmetry. In contrast to the so-called Z 2 topological insulators, an exhaustive characterization of antiferromagnetic topological phases with the help of topological invariants has been missing. We analyze a simple model of an antiferromagnetic topological insulator and chart its phase diagram, using a recently proposed criterion for centrosymmetric systems [13]. We then adapt two methods, originally designed for paramagnetic systems, and make antiferromagnetic topological phases manifest. The proposed methods apply far beyond the particular examples treated in this work, and admit straightforward generalization. We illustrate this by two examples of non-centrosymmetric systems, where no simple criteria have been known to identify topological phases. We also present, for some cases, an explicit construction of edge states in an antiferromagnetic topological insulator.
Frustrated quantum magnetism in the Kondo lattice on the zigzag ladder
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Peschke, Matthias; Rausch, Roman; Potthoff, Michael
2018-03-01
The interplay between the Kondo effect, indirect magnetic interaction, and geometrical frustration is studied in the Kondo lattice on the one-dimensional zigzag ladder. Using the density-matrix renormalization group, the ground-state and various short- and long-range spin- and density-correlation functions are calculated for the model at half filling as a function of the antiferromagnetic Kondo interaction down to J =0.3 t , where t is the nearest-neighbor hopping on the zigzag ladder. Geometrical frustration is shown to lead to at least two critical points: Starting from the strong-J limit, where almost local Kondo screening dominates and where the system is a nonmagnetic Kondo insulator, antiferromagnetic correlations between nearest-neighbor and next-nearest-neighbor local spins become stronger and stronger, until at Jcdim≈0.89 t frustration is alleviated by a spontaneous breaking of translational symmetry and a corresponding transition to a dimerized state. This is characterized by antiferromagnetic correlations along the legs and by alternating antiferro- and ferromagnetic correlations on the rungs of the ladder. A mechanism of partial Kondo screening that has been suggested for the Kondo lattice on the two-dimensional triangular lattice is not realized in the one-dimensional case. Furthermore, within the symmetry-broken dimerized state, there is a magnetic transition to a 90∘ quantum spin spiral with quasi-long-range order at Jcmag≈0.84 t . The quantum-critical point is characterized by a closure of the spin gap (with decreasing J ) and a divergence of the spin-correlation length and of the spin-structure factor S (q ) at wave vector q =π /2 . This is opposed to the model on the one-dimensional bipartite chain, which is known to have a finite spin gap for all J >0 at half filling.
Thermoelectric Properties of Electron-Doped SrMnO3 Single Crystals with Perovskite Structure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suzuki, T.; Sakai, H.; Taguchi, Y.; Tokura, Y.
2012-06-01
Thermoelectric properties have been investigated for single crystals of Sr(Mn1- x Mo x )O3 with the perovskite structure. Similar to (Sr1- x Ce x )MnO3, the Seebeck coefficient for lightly electron-doped compounds ( x ≤ 0.01) is enhanced upon G-type antiferromagnetic ordering, while maintaining metallic conduction. This results in enhancement of the figure of merit ( ZT). On the other hand, the Seebeck coefficient for the more electron-doped compound ( x = 0.025) changes sign from negative to positive within a spin and orbital ordered phase (with C-type antiferromagnetic configuration and Mn 3 z 2 - r 2 type orbital order) as the temperature is lowered, whereas the Hall coefficient remains negative in the whole temperature range. The enhancement of the ZT value in the G-type antiferromagnetic phase implies the possibility for improvement of the thermoelectric efficiency by using the coupling between charge, spin, orbital, and lattice degrees of freedom in strongly correlated electron systems.
Decoupling of the antiferromagnetic and insulating states in Tb-doped Sr 2IrO 4
Wang, J. C.; Aswartham, S.; Ye, Feng; ...
2015-12-08
Sr 2IrO 4 is a spin-orbit coupled insulator with an antiferromagnetic (AFM) transition at T N = 240 K. We report results of a comprehensive study of single-crystal Sr 2Ir 1-xTb xO 4 (0≤x≤0.03). This study found that mere 3% (x=0.03) tetravalent Tb 4+(4f 7) substituting for Ir 4+ (rather than Sr 2+) completely suppresses the long-range collinear AFM transition but retains the insulating state, leading to a phase diagram featuring a decoupling of magnetic interactions and charge gap. The insulating state at x = 0.03 is characterized by an unusually large specific heat at low temperatures and an incommensuratemore » magnetic state having magnetic peaks at (0.95, 0, 0) and (0, 0.95, 0) in the neutron diffraction, suggesting a spiral or spin density wave order. It is apparent that Tb doping effectively changes the relative strength of the SOI and the tetragonal CEF and enhances the Hund’s rule coupling that competes with the SOI, and destabilizes the AFM state. However, the disappearance of the AFM accompanies no metallic state chiefly because an energy level mismatch for the Ir and Tb sites weakens charge carrier hopping and renders a persistent insulating state. Furthermore, this work highlights an unconventional correlation between the AFM and insulating states in which the magnetic transition plays no critical role in the formation of the charge gap in the iridate.« less
Entanglement entropy for the long-range Ising chain in a transverse field.
Koffel, Thomas; Lewenstein, M; Tagliacozzo, Luca
2012-12-28
We consider the Ising model in a transverse field with long-range antiferromagnetic interactions that decay as a power law with their distance. We study both the phase diagram and the entanglement properties as a function of the exponent of the interaction. The phase diagram can be used as a guide for future experiments with trapped ions. We find two gapped phases, one dominated by the transverse field, exhibiting quasi-long-range order, and one dominated by the long-range interaction, with long-range Néel ordered ground states. We determine the location of the quantum critical points separating those two phases. We determine their critical exponents and central charges. In the phase with quasi-long-range order the ground states exhibit exotic corrections to the area law for the entanglement entropy coexisting with gapped entanglement spectra.
A-site Ordered Chromium Perovskites, ACu3Cr4O12 with A = Trivalent Ions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sugiyama, Jun; Nozaki, Hiroshi; Umegaki, Izumi; Higemoto, Wataru; Isobe, Masahiko; Takagi, Hidenori; Sakurai, Hiroya; Ansaldo, Eduardo J.; Brewer, Jess H.; Sassa, Yasmine; Forslund, Ola Kenji; Månsson, Martin
The magnetic ground state of the A-site ordered chromium perovskites, ACu3Cr4O12 with A = Y, La, Eu, and Lu has been investigated with μ+SR using powder samples prepared by a high-pressure technique. Weak transverse field measurements revealed that the four compounds enter into a magnetic phase below 230-260 K. Moreover, the transition temperature (TN) was found to decrease with increasing the size of A3+ ions. Zero field measurements indicated the formation of static antiferromagnetic (AF) order in ACu3Cr4O12 below TN. Furthermore, since the internal magnetic field in the AF phase is independent of A, the role of 4f electrons on the AF state is very limited and/or eventually absence in ACu3Cr4O12.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schmidt, Burkhard; Thalmeier, Peter
2014-05-01
The Heisenberg model on a triangular lattice is a prime example of a geometrically frustrated spin system. However most experimentally accessible compounds have spatially anisotropic exchange interactions. As a function of this anisotropy, ground states with different magnetic properties can be realized. Motivated by recent experimental findings on Cs2CuCl4-xBrx, we discuss the full phase diagram of the anisotropic model with two exchange constants J1 and J2, including possible ferromagnetic exchange. Furthermore a comparison with the related square lattice model is carried out. We discuss the zero-temperature phase diagram, ordering vector, ground-state energy, and ordered moment on a classical level and investigate the effect of quantum fluctuations within the framework of spin-wave theory. The field dependence of the ordered moment is shown to be nonmonotonic with field and control parameter.
Anand, V. K.; Johnston, D. C.
2016-07-22
Here, we report magnetic susceptibility χ, isothermal magnetization M, heat capacity C p, and electrical resistivity ρ measurements on undoped EuMn 2As 2 and K-doped Eu 0.96K 0.04Mn 2As 2 and Eu 0.93K 0.07Mn 2As 2 single crystals with the trigonal CaAl 2Si 2-type structure as a function of temperature T and magnetic field H. EuMn 2As 2 has an insulating ground state with an activation energy of 52 meV and exhibits antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering of the Eu +2 spins S=7/2 at T N1=15 K from C p(T) and χ(T) data with a likely spin-reorientation transition at T N2=5.0 K.more » The Mn +2 3d 5 spins-5/2 exhibit AFM ordering at T N=142 K from all three types of measurements. The M(H) isotherm and χ(T) data indicate that the Eu AFM structure is both noncollinear and noncoplanar. The AFM structure of the Mn spins is also unclear. A 4% substitution of K for Eu in Eu 0.96K 0.04Mn 2As 2 is sufficient to induce a metallic ground state. We found evidence for a difference in the AFM structure of the Eu moments in the metallic crystals from that of undoped EuMn 2As 2 versus both T and H. For metallic Eu 0.96K 0.04Mn 2As 2 and Eu 0.93K 0.07Mn 2As 2, an anomalous S-shape T dependence of ρ related to the Mn magnetism is found. Upon cooling from 200 K, ρ exhibits a strong negative curvature, reaches maximum positive slope at the Mn T N≈150 K, and then continues to decrease but more slowly below T N. Finally, this suggests that dynamic short-range AFM order of the Mn spins above the Mn T N strongly suppresses the resistivity, contrary to the conventional decrease of ρ that is only observed upon cooling below T N of an antiferromagnet.« less
Quantum computation on the edge of a symmetry-protected topological order.
Miyake, Akimasa
2010-07-23
We elaborate the idea of quantum computation through measuring the correlation of a gapped ground state, while the bulk Hamiltonian is utilized to stabilize the resource. A simple computational primitive, by pulling out a single spin adiabatically from the bulk followed by its measurement, is shown to make any ground state of the one-dimensional isotropic Haldane phase useful ubiquitously as a quantum logical wire. The primitive is compatible with certain discrete symmetries that protect this topological order, and the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg spin-1 finite chain is practically available. Our approach manifests a holographic principle in that the logical information of a universal quantum computer can be written and processed perfectly on the edge state (i.e., boundary) of the system, supported by the persistent entanglement from the bulk even when the ground state and its evolution cannot be exactly analyzed.
High antiferromagnetic transition temperature of a honeycomb compound SrRu 2O 6
Tian, Wei; Svoboda, Chris; Ochi, M.; ...
2015-09-14
We study the high-temperature magnetic order in a quasi-two-dimensional honeycomb compound SrRu 2O 6 by measuring magnetization and neutron powder diffraction with both polarized and unpolarized neutrons. SrRu 2O 6 crystallizes into the hexagonal lead antimonate (PbSb 2O 6, space group P31m) structure with layers of edge-sharing RuO6 octahedra separated by Sr 2+ ions. SrRu 2O 6 is found to order at T N = 565 K with Ru moments coupled antiferromagnetically both in plane and out of plane. The magnetic moment is 1.30(2) μ B/Ru at room temperature and is along the crystallographic c axis in the G-type magneticmore » structure. We perform density functional calculations with constrained random-phase approximation (RPA) to obtain the electronic structure and effective intra- and interorbital interaction parameters. The projected density of states shows strong hybridization between Ru 4d and O 2p. By downfolding to the target t 2g bands we extract the effective magnetic Hamiltonian and perform Monte Carlo simulations to determine the transition temperature as a function of interand intraplane couplings. We find a weak interplane coupling, 3% of the strong intraplane coupling, permits three-dimensional magnetic order at the observed T N .« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sokolov, Andrey; Nishiguchi, Daiki; Aronson, Igor
Living systems represented by ensembles of motile organisms demonstrate a transition from a chaotic motion to a highly ordered state. Examples of such living systems include suspensions of bacteria, schools of fish, flocks of birds and even crowds of people. In spite of significant differences in interacting mechanisms and motion scales, ordered living systems have many similarities: short-range alignment of organism, turbulent-like motion, emergence of large-scale flows and dynamic vortices. In this work, we rectify a turbulent dynamics in suspensions of swimming bacteria Bacillus subtilis by imposing periodical constraints on bacterial motion. Bacteria, swimming between periodically placed microscopic vertical pillars, may self-organize in a stable lattice of vortices. We demonstrate the emergence of a strong anti-ferromagnetic order of bacterial vortices in a rectangular lattice of pillars. Hydrodynamic interaction between vortices increases the stability of an emerged pattern. The highest stability of vortices in the anti-ferromagnetic lattice and the fastest vortices speed were observed in structures with the periods comparable with a correlation length of bacterial unconstrained motion. A.S and I.A were supported by the US DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Science And Engineering, under contract No. DE AC02-06CH11357 and D.N was supported by ALPS and JSPS Grant No. 26-9915.
Phase coexistence and exchange-bias effect in LiM n2O4 nanorods
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhang, X. K.; Yuan, J. J.; Xie, Y. M.; Yu, Y.; Kuang, F. G.; Yu, H. J.; Zhu, X. R.; Shen, H.
2018-03-01
In this paper, the magnetic properties of LiM n2O4 nanorods with an average diameter of ˜100 nm and length of ˜1 μ m are investigated. The temperature dependences of dc and ac susceptibility measurements show that LiM n2O4 nanorods experience multiple magnetic phase transitions upon cooling, i.e., paramagnetic (PM), antiferromagnetic (AFM), canted antiferromagnetic (CAFM), and cluster spin glass (SG). The coexistence between a long-range ordered AFM phase due to a M n4 +-M n4 + interaction and a cluster SG phase originating from frozen AFM clusters at low temperature in LiM n2O4 nanorods is elucidated. Field-cooled hysteresis loops (FC loops) and magnetic training effect (TE) measurements confirm the presence of an exchange-bias (EB) effect in LiM n2O4 nanorods below the Néel temperature (TN˜60 K ) . Furthermore, by analyzing the TE, we conclude that the observed EB effect originates completely from an exchange coupling interaction at the interface between the AFM and cluster SG states. A phenomenological model based on phase coexistence is proposed to interpret the origin of the EB effect below 60 K in the present compound. In turn, the appearance of the EB effect further supports the coexistence of AFM order along with a cluster SG state in LiM n2O4 nanorods.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Maximenko, Yulia; Scipioni, Kane; Wang, Zhenyu; Katmis, Ferhat; Steiner, Charles; Weis, Adam; van Harlingen, Dale; Madhavan, Vidya
Topological insulators Bi2Te3 and Sb2Te3 are promising materials for electronics, but both are naturally prone to vacancies and anti-site defects that move the Fermi energy onto the bulk bands. Fabricating (Bi1-xSbx)2 Te3 (BST) with the tuned x minimizes point defects and unmasks topological surface states by reducing bulk carriers. BST thin films have shown topological surface states and quantum anomalous Hall effect. However, different studies reported variable Sb:Bi ratios used to grow an undoped BST film. Here, we develop a reliable way to grow defect-free subnanometer-flat BST thin films having the Fermi energy tuned to the Dirac point. High-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and Landau level spectroscopy prove the importance of crystallinity and surface roughness-not only Sb:Bi ratio-for the final bulk carrier concentration. The BST thin films were doped with Cr and studied with STM with atomic resolution. Counterintuitively, Cr density is anticorrelated with the local band gap due to Cr's antiferromagnetic order. We analyze the correlations and report the relevant band gap values. Predictably, high external magnetic field compromises antiferromagnetic order, and the local band gap increases. US DOE DE-SC0014335; Moore Found. GBMF4860; F. Seitz MRL.
Pressure-tuned quantum criticality in the antiferromagnetic Kondo semimetal CeNi 2–δAs 2
Luo, Yongkang; Ronning, F.; Wakeham, N.; ...
2015-10-19
The easily tuned balance among competing interactions in Kondo-lattice metals allows access to a zero-temperature, continuous transition between magnetically ordered and disordered phases, a quantum-critical point (QCP). Indeed, these highly correlated electron materials are prototypes for discovering and exploring quantum-critical states. Theoretical models proposed to account for the strange thermodynamic and electrical transport properties that emerge around the QCP of a Kondo lattice assume the presence of an indefinitely large number of itinerant charge carriers. Here, we report a systematic transport and thermodynamic investigation of the Kondo-lattice system CeNi 2–δAs 2 (δ ≈ 0.28) as its antiferromagnetic order is tunedmore » by pressure and magnetic field to zero-temperature boundaries. These experiments show that the very small but finite carrier density of ~0.032 e –/formular unit in CeNi 2–δAs 2 leads to unexpected transport signatures of quantum criticality and the delayed development of a fully coherent Kondo-lattice state with decreasing temperature. Here, the small carrier density and associated semimetallicity of this Kondo-lattice material favor an unconventional, local-moment type of quantum criticality and raises the specter of the Nozières exhaustion idea that an insufficient number of conduction-electron spins to separately screen local moments requires collective Kondo screening.« less
Wu, Jianhua; Hagelberg, Frank
2013-06-03
The magnetic properties of axially confined, hydrogenated single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) of the (n,0)-type with n=5-24 are systematically explored by density functional theory. Emphasis is placed on the relation between the ground-state magnetic moments of SWCNTs and zigzag graphene nanoribbons (ZGNRs). Comparison between the SWCNTs considered here and ZGNRs of equal length gives rise to two basic questions: 1) how does the nanotube curvature affect the antiferromagnetic order known to prevail for ZGNRs, and 2) to what extent do the magnetic moments localized at the SWCNT edges deviate from the zero-curvature limit of n/3μB ? In response to these questions, it is found that systems with n≥7 display preference for antiferromagnetic order at any length investigated, whereas for n=5, 6 the magnetic phase varies with tube length. Furthermore, elementary patterns are identified that describe the progression of the magnitude of the magnetic moment with n for the longest tubes explored in this work. The spin densities of the considered SWCNTs are analyzed as a function of the tube length L, with L ranging from 3 to 11 transpolyene rings for n≥7 and from 3 to 30 rings for n=5 and 6. Copyright © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Spin Hall effects in metallic antiferromagnets – perspectives for future spin-orbitronics
Sklenar, Joseph; Zhang, Wei; Jungfleisch, Matthias B.; ...
2016-03-07
In this paper, we investigate angular dependent spin-orbit torques from the spin Hall effect in a metallic antiferromagnet using the spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance technique. The large spin Hall effect exists in PtMn, a prototypical CuAu-I-type metallic antiferromagnet. By applying epitaxial growth, we previously reported an appreciable difference in spin-orbit torques for c- and a-axis orientated samples, implying anisotropic effects in magnetically ordered materials. In this work we demonstrate through bipolar-magnetic-field experiments a small but noticeable asymmetric behavior in the spin-transfer-torque that appears as a hysteresis effect. Finally, we also suggest that metallic antiferromagnets may be good candidates for the investigationmore » of various unidirectional effects related to novel spin-orbitronics phenomena.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, Gang
We study the proximate magnetic orders and the related quantum phase transition out of quantum spin ice (QSI). We apply the electromagnetic duality of the compact quantum electrodynamics to analyze the condensation of the magnetic monopoles for QSI. The monopole condensation transition represents a unconventional quantum criticality with unusual scaling laws. The magnetic monopole condensation leads to the magnetic states that belong to the ``2-in 2-out'' spin ice manifold and generically have an enlarged magnetic unit cell. We demonstrate that the antiferromagnetic state with the ordering wavevector Q = 2p(001) is proximate to QSI while the ferromagnetic state with the ordering wavevector Q = (000) is not proximate to QSI. This implies that if there exists a direct transition from QSI to the ferromagnetic state, the transition must be strongly first order. We apply the theory to the puzzling experiments on two pyrochlore systems Pr2Ir2O7 and Yb2Ti2O7. chggst@gmail.com.
Studies of superconducting materials with muon spin rotation
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Davis, Michael R.; Stronach, Carey E.; Kossler, W. J.; Schone, H. E.; Yu, X. H.; Uemura, Y. J.; Sternlieb, B. J.; Kempton, J. R.; Oostens, J.; Lankford, W. F.
1989-01-01
The muon spin rotation/relaxation technique was found to be an exceptionally effective means of measuring the magnetic properties of superconductors, including the new high temperature superconductor materials, at the microscopic level. The technique directly measures the magnetic penetration depth (type II superconductors (SC's)) and detects the presence of magnetic ordering (antiferromagnetism or spin-glass ordering were observed in some high temperature superconductor (HTSC's) and in many closely related compounds). Extensive studies of HTSC materials were conducted by the Virginia State University - College of William and Mary - Columbia University collaboration at Brookhaven National Laboratory and TRIUMF (Vancouver). A survey of LaSrCuO and YBaCaCuO systems shows an essentially linear relationship between the transition temperature T(sub c) and the relaxation rate. This appears to be a manifestation of the proportionality between T(sub c) and the Fermi energy, which suggests a high energy scale for the SC coupling, and which is not consistent with the weak coupling of phonon-mediated SC. Studies of LaCuO and YBaCuO parent compounds show clear evidence of antiferromagnetism. YBa2Cu(3-x)CO(x)O7 shows the simultaneous presence of spin-glass magnetic ordering and superconductivity. Three-dimensional SC, (Ba, K) BiO3, unlike the layered CuO-based compounds, shows no suggestion of magnetic ordering. Experimental techniques and theoretical implications are discussed.
Sequential structural and antiferromagnetic transitions in BaFe2Se3 under pressure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhang, Yang; Lin, Ling-Fang; Zhang, Jun-Jie; Dagotto, Elbio; Dong, Shuai
2018-01-01
The discovery of superconductivity in the two-leg ladder compound BaFe2S3 has established the 123-type iron chalcogenides as a novel and interesting subgroup of the iron-based superconductor family. However, in this 123 series, BaFe2Se3 is an exceptional member, with a magnetic order and crystalline structure different from all others. Recently, an exciting experiment reported the emergence of superconductivity in BaFe2Se3 at high pressure [J. Ying et al., Phys. Rev. B 95, 241109(R) (2017), 10.1103/PhysRevB.95.241109]. In this paper, we report a first-principles study of BaFe2Se3 . Our analysis unveils a variety of qualitative differences between BaFe2S3 and BaFe2Se3 , including in the latter an unexpected chain of transitions with increasing pressure. First, by gradually reducing the tilting angle of iron ladders, the crystalline structure smoothly transforms from P n m a to C m c m at ˜6 GPa. Second, the system becomes metallic at 10.4 GPa. Third, its unique ambient-pressure Block antiferromagnetic ground state is replaced by the more common stripe (so-called CX-type) antiferromagnetic order at ˜12 GPa, the same magnetic state as the 123-S ladder. This transition is found at a pressure very similar to the experimental superconducting transition. Finally, all magnetic moments vanish at 30 GPa. This reported theoretical diagram of the complete phase evolution is important because of the technical challenges to capture many physical properties in high-pressure experiments. The information obtained in our calculations suggests different characteristics for superconductivity in BaFe2Se3 and BaFe2S3 : in 123-S pairing occurs when magnetic moments vanish, while in 123-Se the transition region from Block- to CX-type magnetism appears to catalyze superconductivity. Finally, an additional superconducting dome above ˜30 GPa is expected to occur.
Structural and magnetic properties of SrMn1-xRuxO3 perovskites
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dabrowski, B.; Kolesnik, S.; Chmaissem, O.; Maxwell, T.
2007-03-01
Ferromagnetism of SrRuO3 is unique among 4d transition metal based perovskite oxides. On substitution of Mn its TC decreases from 163 K to 0 for x˜0.5-0.6 followed by a formation of an antiferromagnetic insulating state at a quantum critical point. The other end member of the SrMn1-xRuxO3 family, a cubic perovskite SrMnO3 is a G-type antiferromagnet with TN=233 K. We have synthesized the complete SrMn1-xRuxO3 solid solution. The polycrystalline samples were characterized by neutron difraction, magnetic, and transport experiments. The incorporation of Ru in the SrMnO3 matrix (0.1<=x<=0.4) results in a phase transition to a C-type antiferromagnetic state accompanied by a cubic-tetragonal transition. The intermediate substitution level induces a spin-glass behavior, due to competing ferro- and antiferromagnetic interactions. Mixed valence Mn^3+/Mn^4+ and Ru^4+/Ru^5+ pairs introduce additional frustration to the magnetic states. The glassy behavior can be observed for x up to 0.7 in the tetragonal structure. Supported by NSF (DMR-0302617) and the U.S. Department of Education
Evolution of the magnetic ground state in the electron-doped antiferromagnet CaMnO3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cornelius, A. L.; Light, B. E.; Neumeier, J. J.
2003-07-01
Measurements of the specific heat on the system CaxMnO3 (x⩽0.10) are reported. Particular attention is paid to the effect that doping the parent compound with electrons by substitution of La for Ca has on the magnetic ground state. The high- (T>40 K) temperature data reveal that doping decreases TN from 122 K for the undoped sample to 103 K for x=0.10. The low temperature (T<20 K) heat-capacity data are consistent with phase separation. The undoped sample displays a finite density of states and typical antiferromagnetic behavior. The addition of electrons in the x⩽0.03 samples creates local ferromagnetism as evidenced by a decreased internal field and the need to add a ferromagnetic component to the heat-capacity data for x=0.03. Further substitution enhances the ferromagnetism as evidenced by the formation of a long-range ferromagnetic component to the undoped antiferromagnetic structure. The results are consistent with a scenario involving the formation of isolated ferromagnetic droplets for small x that start to overlap for x≈0.06 giving rise to long range ferromagnetism coexisting with antiferromagnetism.
High-field magnetization and magnetic phase diagram of α -Cu2V2O7
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gitgeatpong, G.; Suewattana, M.; Zhang, Shiwei; Miyake, A.; Tokunaga, M.; Chanlert, P.; Kurita, N.; Tanaka, H.; Sato, T. J.; Zhao, Y.; Matan, K.
2017-06-01
High-field magnetization of the spin-1 /2 antiferromagnet α -Cu2V2O7 was measured in pulsed magnetic fields of up to 56 T in order to study its magnetic phase diagram. When the field was applied along the easy axis (the a axis), two distinct transitions were observed at Hc 1=6.5 T and Hc 2=18.0 T. The former is a spin-flop transition typical for a collinear antiferromagnet and the latter is believed to be a spin-flip transition of canted moments. The canted moments, which are induced by the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interactions, anti-align for Hc 1
Quasistatic antiferromagnetism in the quantum wells of SmTiO3/SrTiO3 heterostructures
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Need, Ryan F.; Marshall, Patrick B.; Kenney, Eric; Suter, Andreas; Prokscha, Thomas; Salman, Zaher; Kirby, Brian J.; Stemmer, Susanne; Graf, Michael J.; Wilson, Stephen D.
2018-03-01
High carrier density quantum wells embedded within a Mott insulating matrix present a rich arena for exploring unconventional electronic phase behavior ranging from non-Fermi-liquid transport and signatures of quantum criticality to pseudogap formation. Probing the proposed connection between unconventional magnetotransport and incipient electronic order within these quantum wells has however remained an enduring challenge due to the ultra-thin layer thicknesses required. Here we address this challenge by exploring the magnetic properties of high-density SrTiO3 quantum wells embedded within the antiferromagnetic Mott insulator SmTiO3 via muon spin relaxation and polarized neutron reflectometry measurements. The one electron per planar unit cell acquired by the nominal d0 band insulator SrTiO3 when embedded within a d1 Mott SmTiO3 matrix exhibits slow magnetic fluctuations that begin to freeze into a quasistatic spin state below a critical temperature T*. The appearance of this quasistatic well magnetism coincides with the previously reported opening of a pseudogap in the tunneling spectra of high carrier density wells inside this film architecture. Our data suggest a common origin of the pseudogap phase behavior in this quantum critical oxide heterostructure with those observed in bulk Mott materials close to an antiferromagnetic instability.
Mun, Eundeok; Weickert, Dagmar Franziska; Kim, Jaewook; ...
2016-03-01
We investigate partially disordered antiferromagnetism in CoCl 2-2SC(NH 2) 2, in which ab-plane hexagonal layers are staggered along the c axis rather than stacked. A robust 1/3 state forms in applied magnetic fields in which the spins are locked, varying as a function of neither temperature nor field. By contrast, in zero field and applied fields at higher temperatures, partial antiferromagnetic order occurs, in which free spins are available to create a Curie-like magnetic susceptibility. We report measurements of the crystallographic structure and the specific heat, magnetization, and electric polarization down to T = 50mK and up to μ0H =more » 60T. The Co 2+ S = 3/2 spins are Ising-like and form distorted hexagonal layers. The Ising energy scale is well separated from the magnetic exchange, and both energy scales are accessible to the measurements, allowing us to cleanly parametrize them. In transverse fields, a quantum Ising phase transition can be observed at 2 T. Lastly, we find that magnetic exchange striction induces changes in the electric polarization up to 3μC/m 2, and single-ion magnetic anisotropy effects induce a much larger electric polarization change of 300μC/m 2.« less
Roton Minimum as a Fingerprint of Magnon-Higgs Scattering in Ordered Quantum Antiferromagnets.
Powalski, M; Uhrig, G S; Schmidt, K P
2015-11-13
A quantitative description of magnons in long-range ordered quantum antiferromagnets is presented which is consistent from low to high energies. It is illustrated for the generic S=1/2 Heisenberg model on the square lattice. The approach is based on a continuous similarity transformation in momentum space using the scaling dimension as the truncation criterion. Evidence is found for significant magnon-magnon attraction inducing a Higgs resonance. The high-energy roton minimum in the magnon dispersion appears to be induced by strong magnon-Higgs scattering.
Evidence for Jahn-Teller distortions at the antiferromagnetic transition in LaTiO3.
Hemberger, J; Krug von Nidda, H-A; Fritsch, V; Deisenhofer, J; Lobina, S; Rudolf, T; Lunkenheimer, P; Lichtenberg, F; Loidl, A; Bruns, D; Büchner, B
2003-08-08
LaTiO3 is known as a Mott insulator which orders antiferromagnetically at T(N)=146 K. We report on results of thermal expansion and temperature dependent x-ray diffraction together with measurements of the heat capacity, electrical transport measurements, and optical spectroscopy in untwinned single crystals. At T(N) significant structural changes appear, which are volume conserving. Concomitant anomalies are also observed in the dc resistivity, in bulk modulus, and optical reflectivity spectra. We interpret these experimental observations as evidence of orbital order.
Competing interactions in ferromagnetic/antiferromagnetic perovskite superlattices
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Takamura, Y.; Biegalski, M.B.; Christen, H.M.
2009-10-22
Soft x-ray magnetic dichroism, magnetization, and magnetotransport measurements demonstrate that the competition between different magnetic interactions (exchange coupling, electronic reconstruction, and long-range interactions) in La{sub 0.7}Sr{sub 0.3}FeO{sub 3}(LSFO)/La{sub 0.7}Sr{sub 0.3}MnO{sub 3}(LSMO) perovskite oxide superlattices leads to unexpected functional properties. The antiferromagnetic order parameter in LSFO and ferromagnetic order parameter in LSMO show a dissimilar dependence on sublayer thickness and temperature, illustrating the high degree of tunability in these artificially layered materials.
Frustration and correlations in stacked triangular-lattice Ising antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Burnell, F. J.; Chalker, J. T.
2015-12-01
We study multilayer triangular-lattice Ising antiferromagnets with interlayer interactions that are weak and frustrated in an abc stacking. By analyzing a coupled height model description of these systems, we show that they exhibit a classical spin liquid regime at low temperature, in which both intralayer and interlayer correlations are strong but there is no long-range order. Diffuse scattering in this regime is concentrated on a helix in reciprocal space, as observed for charge ordering in the materials LuFe2O4 and YbFe2O4 .
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rosenkranz, S.; Phelan, D.; Louca, D.; Lee, S. H.; Chupas, P. J.; Osborn, R.; Zheng, H.; Mitchell, J. F.
2006-03-01
The cobalt perovskites La1-xSrxCoO3 show intriguing spin, lattice, and orbital properties similar to the ones observed in colossal magnetoresistive manganites. The x=0 parent compound is a non-magnetic insulator at low temperatures, but shows evidence of a spin-state transition of the cobalt ions above 50K from a low-spin to an intermediate or high-spin configuration. Using high resolution, inelastic neutron scattering, we observe a distinct low energy excitation at 0.6meV coincident with the thermally induced spin state transition observed in susceptibility measurements. The thermal activation of this excited spin state also leads to short-range, dynamic ferro- and antiferromagnetic correlations. These observations are consistent with the activation of a zero-field split intermediate spin state as well as the presence of dynamic orbital ordering of these excited states. Work supported by US DOE BES-DMS W-31-109-ENG-38 and NSF DMR-0454672
Chan, M. K.; Dorow, C. J.; Mangin-Thro, L.; ...
2016-03-04
We report that antiferromagnetic correlations have been argued to be the cause of the d-wave superconductivity and the pseudogap phenomena exhibited by the cuprates. Although the antiferromagnetic response in the pseudogap state has been reported for a number of compounds, there exists no information for structurally simple HgBa 2CuO 4+δ. We report neutron-scattering results for HgBa 2CuO 4+δ (superconducting transition temperature T c≈71 K, pseudogap temperature T*≈305 K) that demonstrate the absence of the two most prominent features of the magnetic excitation spectrum of the cuprates: the X-shaped ‘hourglass’ response and the resonance mode in the superconducting state. Instead, themore » response is Y-shaped, gapped and significantly enhanced below T*, and hence a prominent signature of the pseudogap state.« less
Chang; Shrock
2000-10-01
We present exact calculations of the zero-temperature partition function (chromatic polynomial) and W(q), the exponent of the ground-state entropy, for the q-state Potts antiferromagnet with next-nearest-neighbor spin-spin couplings on square lattice strips, of width L(y)=3 and L(y)=4 vertices and arbitrarily great length Lx vertices, with both free and periodic boundary conditions. The resultant values of W for a range of physical q values are compared with each other and with the values for the full two-dimensional lattice. These results give insight into the effect of such nonnearest-neighbor couplings on the ground-state entropy. We show that the q=2 (Ising) and q=4 Potts antiferromagnets have zero-temperature critical points on the Lx-->infinity limits of the strips that we study. With the generalization of q from Z+ to C, we determine the analytic structure of W(q) in the q plane for the various cases.
Epitaxial Growth of Intermetallic MnPt Films on Oxides and Large Exchange Bias
Liu, Zhiqi; Biegalski, Michael D; Hsu, Mr. S. L.; ...
2015-11-05
We achieved a high-quality epitaxial growth of intermetallic MnPt films on oxides, with potential for multiferroic heterostructure applications. Also, antisite-stabilized spin-flipping induces ferromagnetism in MnPt films, although it is robustly antiferromagnetic in bulk. Moreover, highly ordered antiferromagnetic MnPt films exhibit superiorly large exchange coupling with a ferromagnetic layer.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Zhe; Lorenz, T.; Gorbunov, D. I.; Cong, P. T.; Kohama, Y.; Niesen, S.; Breunig, O.; Engelmayer, J.; Herman, A.; Wu, Jianda; Kindo, K.; Wosnitza, J.; Zherlitsyn, S.; Loidl, A.
2018-05-01
We report on magnetization, sound-velocity, and magnetocaloric-effect measurements of the Ising-like spin-1 /2 antiferromagnetic chain system BaCo2V2O8 as a function of temperature down to 1.3 K and an applied transverse magnetic field up to 60 T. While across the Néel temperature of TN˜5 K anomalies in magnetization and sound velocity confirm the antiferromagnetic ordering transition, at the lowest temperature the field-dependent measurements reveal a sharp softening of sound velocity v (B ) and a clear minimum of temperature T (B ) at B⊥c,3 D=21.4 T , indicating the suppression of the antiferromagnetic order. At higher fields, the T (B ) curve shows a broad minimum at B⊥c=40 T , accompanied by a broad minimum in the sound velocity and a saturationlike magnetization. These features signal a quantum phase transition, which is further characterized by the divergent behavior of the Grüneisen parameter ΓB∝(B -B⊥c)-1. By contrast, around the critical field, the Grüneisen parameter converges as temperature decreases, pointing to a quantum critical point of the one-dimensional transverse-field Ising model.
Large anomalous Hall effect in a non-collinear antiferromagnet Mn3Sn at room temperature
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Higo, Tomoya; Kiyohara, Naoki; Nakatsuji, Satoru
Recent development in theoretical and experimental studies have provided a framework for understanding the anomalous Hall effect using Berry-phase concepts, and this perspective has led to predictions that, under certain conditions, a large anomalous Hall effect may appear in spin liquids and antiferromagnets. In this talk, we will present experimental results showing that the antiferromagnet Mn3Sn, which has a non-collinear 120-degree spin order, exhibits a large anomalous Hall effect. The magnitude of the Hall conductivity is ~ 20 Ω-1 cm-1 at room temperature and > 100 Ω-1 cm-1 at low temperatures. We found that a main component of the Hall signal, which is nearly independent of a magnetic field and magnetization, can change the sign with the reversal of a small applied field, corresponding to the rotation of the staggered moments of the non-collinear antiferromagnetic spin order which carries a very small net moment of a few of mμB. Supported by PRESTO, JST, and Grants-in-Aid for Program for Advancing Strategic International Networks to Accelerate the Circulation of Talented Researchers (No. R2604) and Scientific Research on Innovative Areas (15H05882 and 15H05883) from JSPS.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Ziat, D.; Aczel, Adam A.; Sinclair, R.
We have performed magnetic susceptibility, heat capacity, muon spin relaxation, and neutron-scattering measurements on three members of the family Ba 3MRu 2O 9, where M=In, Y, and Lu. These systems consist of mixed-valence Ru dimers on a triangular lattice with antiferromagnetic interdimer exchange. Although previous work has argued that charge order within the dimers or intradimer double exchange plays an important role in determining the magnetic properties, our results suggest that the dimers are better described as molecular units due to significant orbital hybridization, resulting in one spin-1/2 moment distributed equally over the two Ru sites. These molecular building blocksmore » form a frustrated, quasi-two-dimensional triangular lattice. Our zero- and longitudinal-field μSR results indicate that the molecular moments develop a collective, static magnetic ground state, with oscillations of the zero-field muon spin polarization indicative of long-range magnetic order in the Lu sample. In conclusion, the static magnetism is much more disordered in the Y and In samples, but they do not appear to be conventional spin glasses.« less
Ziat, D.; Aczel, Adam A.; Sinclair, R.; ...
2017-05-22
We have performed magnetic susceptibility, heat capacity, muon spin relaxation, and neutron-scattering measurements on three members of the family Ba 3MRu 2O 9, where M=In, Y, and Lu. These systems consist of mixed-valence Ru dimers on a triangular lattice with antiferromagnetic interdimer exchange. Although previous work has argued that charge order within the dimers or intradimer double exchange plays an important role in determining the magnetic properties, our results suggest that the dimers are better described as molecular units due to significant orbital hybridization, resulting in one spin-1/2 moment distributed equally over the two Ru sites. These molecular building blocksmore » form a frustrated, quasi-two-dimensional triangular lattice. Our zero- and longitudinal-field μSR results indicate that the molecular moments develop a collective, static magnetic ground state, with oscillations of the zero-field muon spin polarization indicative of long-range magnetic order in the Lu sample. In conclusion, the static magnetism is much more disordered in the Y and In samples, but they do not appear to be conventional spin glasses.« less
Predicting Hidden bulk phases in Sr3Ru2O7 from surface phases
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rivero, Pablo; Chen, Chen; Jin, Roying; Meunier, Vincent; Plummer, E. W.; Shelton, William
Double-layered Sr3Ru2O7 has received phenomenal attention as it exhibits an overabundance of exotic phases when perturbed. Recently it has been shown that the surface of this material displays significantly different properties than in the bulk due to the surface induced tilt of the RuO6 octahedra. Here we report detailed first principles calculations of the surface structure, and the structure property relationship. Tilt of the octahedra drive the surface into a much less conducting state than in the bulk due in part to the different electronic properties of the two Ru atoms in the first RuO2 layer of the bilayer. The broken symmetry at the surface causes a tilt and enhanced rotation of the octahedra only present in the first (surface) bilayer. Theoretically the surface is ferromagnetically ordered but the stability with respect to the antiferromagnetic phase is small ( = 11 meV). We have calculated the bulk properties under uniaxial pressure, which induces a tilt and drives the bulk into an antiferromagnetic-insulating state. Support of this project came from DoE contract No. DE-SCOO12432 and the Louisiana Board of Regents. V. M. acknowledges support from New York State under NYSTAR program C080117.
Magnetic order and interactions in ferrimagnetic Mn 3 Si 2 Te 6
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
May, Andrew F.; Liu, Yaohua; Calder, Stuart
2017-05-01
The magnetism in Mn 3Si 2Te 6 has been investigated using thermodynamic measurements, first principles calculations, neutron diffraction and diffuse neutron scattering on single crystals. These data con rm that Mn3Si2Te6 is a ferrimagnet below T C 78 K. The magnetism is anisotropic, with magnetization and neutron diffraction demonstrating that the moments lie within the basal plane of the trigonal structure. The saturation magnetization of 1.6 B/Mn at 5K originates from the different multiplicities of the two antiferromagnetically-aligned Mn sites. First principles calculations reveal antiferromagnetic exchange for the three nearest Mn-Mn pairs, which leads to a competition between the ferrimagneticmore » ground state and three other magnetic configurations. The ferrimagnetic state results from the energy associated with the third-nearest neighbor interaction, and thus long- range interactions are essential for the observed behavior. Di use magnetic scattering is observed around the 002 Bragg reflection at 120 K, which indicates the presence of strong spin correlations well above T C . These are promoted by the competing ground states that result in a relative suppression of T C , and may be associated with a small ferromagnetic component that produces anisotropic magnetism below ≈ 330 K.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Jin Hong; Kim, Kwang-Eun; Jang, Byung-Kweon; Ünal, Ahmet A.; Valencia, Sergio; Kronast, Florian; Ko, Kyung-Tae; Kowarik, Stefan; Seidel, Jan; Yang, Chan-Ho
2017-08-01
Implementation of antiferromagnetic compounds as active elements in spintronics has been hindered by their insensitive nature against external perturbations which causes difficulties in switching among different antiferromagnetic spin configurations. Electrically controllable strain gradient can become a key parameter to tune the antiferromagnetic states of multiferroic materials. We have discovered a correlation between an electrically written straight-stripe mixed-phase boundary and an in-plane antiferromagnetic spin axis in highly elongated La-5%-doped BiFe O3 thin films by performing polarization-dependent photoemission electron microscopy in conjunction with cluster model calculations. A model Hamiltonian calculation for the single-ion anisotropy including the spin-orbit interaction has been performed to figure out the physical origin of the link between the strain gradient present in the mixed-phase area and its antiferromagnetic spin axis. Our findings enable estimation of the strain-gradient-induced magnetic anisotropy energy per Fe ion at around 5 ×10-12eV m , and provide a pathway toward an electric-field-induced 90° rotation of antiferromagnetic spin axis at room temperature by flexomagnetism.
Simultaneous occurrence of multiferroism and short-range magnetic order in DyFeO 3
Wang, Jinchen; Liu, Juanjuan; Sheng, Jieming; ...
2016-04-06
In this paper, we present a combined neutron scattering and magnetization study on the multiferroic DyFeO 3, which shows a very strong magnetoelectric effect. Applying magnetic field along the c axis, the weak ferromagnetic order of the Fe ions is quickly recovered from a spin reorientation transition, and the long-range antiferromagnetic order of Dy becomes a short-range one. We found that the short-range order concurs with the multiferroic phase and is responsible for its sizable hysteresis. In conclusion, our H-T phase diagram suggests that the strong magnetoelectric effect in DyFeO 3 has to be understood with not only the weakmore » ferromagnetism of Fe but also the short-range antiferromagnetic order of Dy.« less
Fratino, L.; Sémon, P.; Charlebois, M.; ...
2017-06-06
The properties of a phase with large correlation length can be strongly influenced by the underlying normal phase. Here, we illustrate this by studying the half-filled two-dimensional Hubbard model using cellular dynamical mean-field theory with continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo. Sharp crossovers in the mechanism that favors antiferromagnetic correlations and in the corresponding local density of states are observed. We found that these crossovers occur at values of the interaction strength U and temperature T that are controlled by the underlying normal-state Mott transition.
Competing Quantum Orderings in Cuprate Superconductors: A Minimal Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Martin, Ivar; Ortiz, Gerardo; Balatsky, A. V.; Bishop, A. R.
2001-03-01
We present a minimal model for cuprate superconductors. At the unrestricted mean-field level, the model produces homogeneous superconductivity at large doping, striped superconductivity in the underdoped regime and various antiferromagnetic phases at low doping and for high temperatures. On the underdoped side, the superconductor is intrinsically inhomogeneous and global phase coherence is achieved through Josephson-like coupling of the superconducting stripes. The model is applied to calculate experimentally measurable ARPES spectra, and local density of states measurable by STM.
Magnetotransport study of Dirac fermions in YbMnBi 2 antiferromagnet
Wang, Aifeng; Zaliznyak, I.; Ren, Weijun; ...
2016-10-15
We report quantum transport and Dirac fermions in YbMnBi 2 single crystals. YbMnBi 2 is a layered material with anisotropic conductivity and magnetic order below 290 K. Magnetotransport properties, nonzero Berry phase, and small cyclotron mass indicate the presence of Dirac fermions. Lastly, angular-dependent magnetoresistance indicates a possible quasi-two-dimensional Fermi surface, whereas the deviation from the nontrivial Berry phase expected for Dirac states suggests the contribution of parabolic bands at the Fermi level or spin-orbit coupling.
Singlet Orbital Ordering in Bilayer Sr_{3}Cr_{2}O_{7}.
Jeanneau, Justin; Toulemonde, Pierre; Remenyi, Gyorgy; Sulpice, André; Colin, Claire; Nassif, Vivian; Suard, Emmanuelle; Salas Colera, Eduardo; Castro, Germán R; Gay, Frederic; Urdaniz, Corina; Weht, Ruben; Fevrier, Clement; Ralko, Arnaud; Lacroix, Claudine; Aligia, Armando A; Núñez-Regueiro, Manuel
2017-05-19
We perform an extensive study of Sr_{3}Cr_{2}O_{7}, the n=2 member of the Ruddlesden-Popper Sr_{n+1}Cr_{n}O_{3n+1} system. An antiferromagnetic ordering is clearly visible in the magnetization and the specific heat, which yields a huge transition entropy, Rln(6). By neutron diffraction as a function of temperature we have determined the antiferromagnetic structure that coincides with the one obtained from density functional theory calculations. It is accompanied by anomalous asymmetric distortions of the CrO_{6} octahedra. Strong coupling and Lanczos calculations on a derived Kugel-Khomskii Hamiltonian yield a simultaneous orbital and moment ordering. Our results favor an exotic ordered phase of orbital singlets not originated by frustration.
Tunable (δπ, δπ)-Type Antiferromagnetic Order in α-Fe(Te,Se) Superconductors
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bao, Wei; Qiu, Y.; Huang, Q.; Green, M. A.; Zajdel, P.; Fitzsimmons, M. R.; Zhernenkov, M.; Chang, S.; Fang, Minghu; Qian, B.; Vehstedt, E. K.; Yang, Jinhu; Pham, H. M.; Spinu, L.; Mao, Z. Q.
2009-06-01
The new α-Fe(Te,Se) superconductors share the common iron building block and ferminology with the LaFeAsO and BaFe2As2 families of superconductors. In contrast with the predicted commensurate spin-density-wave order at the nesting wave vector (π, 0), a completely different magnetic order with a composition tunable propagation vector (δπ, δπ) was determined for the parent compound Fe1+yTe in this powder and single-crystal neutron diffraction study. The new antiferromagnetic order survives as a short-range one even in the highest TC sample. An alternative to the prevailing nesting Fermi surface mechanism is required to understand the latest family of ferrous superconductors.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Århammar, C.; Moyses Araujo, C.; Rao, K. V.; Norgren, Susanne; Johansson, Börje; Ahuja, Rajeev
2010-10-01
In this work, a first-principles study of the energetic and magnetic properties of V-doped MgO is presented, where both the bulk and (001) surface were investigated. It is found that V assumes a high-spin state with a local moment of about 3μB . In the bulk, the interaction between these local moments is very short ranged and the antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering is energetically more favorable. The formation of V-VMg-V defect clusters is found to weaken the antiferromagnetic coupling in bulk MgO, degenerating the AFM and ferromagnetic state. However, these clusters are high in energy and will not form at equilibrium conditions. By employing the GGA+U approach, with U=5eV , the V3d states on the (001) surface are shifted below the Fermi level, and a reasonable surface geometry was achieved. A calculation with the hybrid HSE03 functional, contradicts the GGA+U results, indicating that the V-MgO surface should be metallic at this concentration. From the energetics it is concluded that, at the modeled concentration, VxOy phases will limit the solubility of V in MgO at equilibrium conditions, which is in agreement with previous experimental findings. In order to achieve higher concentrations of V, an off-equilibrium synthesis method is needed. Finally, we find that the formation energy of V at the surface is considerably higher than in the bulk and V is thus expected to diffuse from the surface into the bulk of MgO.
Non-Equilibrium Effects on the Hidden Order of Microstructured URu2Si2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Winter, Laurel E.; Moll, Philip J. W.; Ramshaw, B. J.; Shekhter, Arkady; Harrison, N.; Bauer, Eric D.; McDonald, Ross D.
Despite extensive studies on the heavy-fermion URu2Si2, the order parameter associated with the hidden order state has yet to be established. It is known, however that the hidden order can be suppressed with pressure and high magnetic fields, which results in the development of antiferromagnetism, and the realization of a polarized state respectively. Focused Ion Beam lithography (FIB) of URu2Si2 has enabled high magnetic field observation of quantum oscillations in the resistance, indicating the preservation of sample quality to micron scale structures. These recent advances in FIB lithography have enabled the application of unprecedented electric fields while minimizing the effects of Joule heating in highly conductive metals at cryogenic temperatures. To this end, we have been able to create the necessary sample geometry to study the effect of an electric field upon hidden order in magnetic fields up to 15 T. Preliminary results suggest that above a characteristic threshold electric field, hidden order is suppressed revealing a state with similar magnetoresistive properties to the Kondo lattice in the absence of hidden order. Work supported by US Dept. of Energy through LANL/LDRD Program and G.T. Seaborg Institute, as well as NSF DMR-1157490 and the State of Florida.
Control of the Effective Free-Energy Landscape in a Frustrated Magnet by a Field Pulse
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wan, Yuan; Moessner, Roderich
2017-10-01
Thermal fluctuations can lift the degeneracy of a ground state manifold, producing a free-energy landscape without accidentally degenerate minima. In a process known as order by disorder, a subset of states incorporating symmetry breaking may be selected. Here, we show that such a free-energy landscape can be controlled in a nonequilibrium setting as the slow motion within the ground state manifold is governed by the fast modes out of it. For the paradigmatic case of the classical pyrochlore X Y antiferromagnet, we show that a uniform magnetic field pulse can excite these fast modes to generate a tunable effective free-energy landscape with minima at thermodynamically unstable portions of the ground state manifold.
Control of the Effective Free-Energy Landscape in a Frustrated Magnet by a Field Pulse.
Wan, Yuan; Moessner, Roderich
2017-10-20
Thermal fluctuations can lift the degeneracy of a ground state manifold, producing a free-energy landscape without accidentally degenerate minima. In a process known as order by disorder, a subset of states incorporating symmetry breaking may be selected. Here, we show that such a free-energy landscape can be controlled in a nonequilibrium setting as the slow motion within the ground state manifold is governed by the fast modes out of it. For the paradigmatic case of the classical pyrochlore XY antiferromagnet, we show that a uniform magnetic field pulse can excite these fast modes to generate a tunable effective free-energy landscape with minima at thermodynamically unstable portions of the ground state manifold.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kolesik, Miroslav; Suzuki, Masuo
1995-02-01
The antiferromagnetic three-state Potts model on the simple-cubic lattice is studied using the coherent-anomaly method (CAM). The CAM analysis provides the estimates for the critical exponents which indicate the XY universality class, namely α = -0.011, β = 0.351, γ = 1.309 and δ = 4.73. This observation corroborates the results of the recent Monte Carlo simulations, and disagrees with the proposal of a new universality class.
Investigations of possible states for coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Ham, T.E.
1984-01-01
Ginzburg-Landau theory is used to investigate states in which both superconductivity and ferromagnetism exist simultaneously in certain rare-earth ternary compounds. The spontaneous vortex state of Kuper, Revzen and Ron is reexamined and extended to include magnetic oscillations within each vortex cell and the existence of antiferromagnetically aligned vortices. The linearly polarized state of Greenside, Blount and Varma is reinvestigated in what appears to be a more physically acceptable range of parameters that are used in the Ginzburg-Landau free energy functional. The square antiferromagnetic vortex lattice state proposed by Hu and Ham is investigated here for the first time, energetically comparedmore » to the states proposed by Kuper, et al. and Greenside, et al., and used to model the observed coexistence state observed in ErRh/sub 4/B/sub 4/. The results show that this square antiferromagnetic vortex lattice state is energetically favored over the linearly polarized state in large parameter and temperature range. Such a lattice also appears to be a good model to explain many of the experimental observations made on ErRh/sub 4/B/sub 4/. Thus, it is felt that this vortex lattice is the best model, yet examined, to explain the coexistence state in ErRh/sub 4/B/sub 4/.« less
Nakajima, Yasuyuki; Hu, Rongwei; Kirshenbaum, Kevin; Hughes, Alex; Syers, Paul; Wang, Xiangfeng; Wang, Kefeng; Wang, Renxiong; Saha, Shanta R; Pratt, Daniel; Lynn, Jeffrey W; Paglione, Johnpierre
2015-06-01
We report superconductivity and magnetism in a new family of topological semimetals, the ternary half-Heusler compound RPdBi (R: rare earth). In this series, tuning of the rare earth f-electron component allows for simultaneous control of both lattice density via lanthanide contraction and the strength of magnetic interaction via de Gennes scaling, allowing for a unique tuning of the normal-state band inversion strength, superconducting pairing, and magnetically ordered ground states. Antiferromagnetism with ordering vector (½,½,½) occurs below a Néel temperature that scales with de Gennes factor dG, whereas a superconducting transition is simultaneously supressed with increasing dG. With superconductivity appearing in a system with noncentrosymmetric crystallographic symmetry, the possibility of spin-triplet Cooper pairing with nontrivial topology analogous to that predicted for the normal-state electronic structure provides a unique and rich opportunity to realize both predicted and new exotic excitations in topological materials.
New insulating antiferromagnetic quaternary iridates MLa 10Ir 4O 24 (M=Sr, Ba)
Zhao, Qingbiao; Han, Fei; Stoumpos, Constantinos C.; ...
2015-07-01
Recently, oxides of Ir 4+ have received renewed attention in the condensed matter physics community, as it has been reported that certain iridates have a strongly spin-orbital coupled (SOC) electronic state, J eff = ½, that defines the electronic and magnetic properties. The canonical example is the Ruddlesden-Popper compound Sr 2IrO 4, which has been suggested as a potential route to a new class of high temperature superconductor due to the formal analogy between J eff = ½ and the S = ½ state of the cuprate superconductors. The quest for other iridium oxides that present tests of the underlyingmore » SOC physics is underway. In this spirit, here we report the synthesis and physical properties of two new quaternary tetravalent iridates, MLa 10Ir 4O 24 (M = Sr, Ba). The crystal structure of both compounds features isolated IrO 6 octahedra in which the electronic configuration of Ir is d 5. As a result, both compounds order antiferromagnetically despite the lack of obvious superexchange pathways, and resistivity measurement shows that SrLa 10Ir 4O 24 is an insulator.« less
Frustration relieved ferrimagnetism in novel A- and B-site-ordered quadruple perovskite.
Chen, Wei-tin; Mizumaki, Masaichiro; Saito, Takashi; Shimakawa, Yuichi
2013-07-28
A novel A- and B-site-ordered quadruple perovskite CaCu3Fe2Sb2O12 was obtained and it shows ferrimagnetism below about 170 K. The B-site Fe spin sublattice adapts a tetrahedral framework in a cubic structure and the Fe(3+)-Fe(3+) antiferromagnetic interaction can result in a geometrical spin frustration as seen in a simple perovskite Ca2FeSbO6. With the introduction of Cu(2+) into the A' site, the antiferromagnetic spin frustration is relieved by the strong Cu(2+)-Fe(3+) interaction, and a ferrimagnetic ordering appears at a much higher temperature than the spin-glass transition temperature.
Majumdar, Kingshuk
2011-03-23
The effects of interlayer coupling and spatial anisotropy on the spin-wave excitation spectra of a three-dimensional spatially anisotropic, frustrated spin-½ Heisenberg antiferromagnet (HAFM) are investigated for the two ordered phases using second-order spin-wave expansion. We show that the second-order corrections to the spin-wave energies are significant and find that the energy spectra of the three-dimensional HAFM have similar qualitative features to the energy spectra of the two-dimensional HAFM on a square lattice. We also discuss the features that can provide experimental measures for the strength of the interlayer coupling, spatial anisotropy parameter, and magnetic frustration.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Rajca, Andrzej; Takahashi, Masahiro; Pink, Maren
2008-06-30
Nitroxide diradicals, in which nitroxides are annelated to m-phenylene forming tricyclic benzobisoxazine-like structures, have been synthesized and characterized by X-ray crystallography, magnetic resonance (EPR and {sup 1}H NMR) spectroscopy, as well as magnetic studies in solution and in solid state. For the octamethyl derivative of benzobisoxazine nitroxide diradical, the conformationally constrained nitroxide moieties are coplanar with the m-phenylene, leading to large values of 2J (2J/k > 200 K in solution and 2J/k >> 300 K in the solid state). For the diradical, in which all ortho and para positions of the m-phenylene are sterically shielded, distortion of the nitroxide moietiesmore » from coplanarity is moderate, such that the singlet-triplet gaps remain large in both solution (2J/k > 200 K) and the solid state (2J/k {approx} 400-800 K), though an onset of thermal depopulation of the triplet ground state is detectable near room temperature. These diradicals have robust triplet ground states with strong ferromagnetic coupling and good stability at ambient conditions. Magnetic behavior of the nitroxide diradicals at low temperature is best fit to the model of one-dimensional S = 1 Heisenberg chains with intrachain antiferromagnetic coupling. The antiferromagnetic coupling between the S = 1 diradicals may be associated with the methyl nitroxide C-H {hor_ellipsis} O contacts, including nonclassical hydrogen bonds. These unprecedented organic S = 1 antiferromagnetic chains are highly isotropic, compared to those of the extensively studied Ni(II)-based chains.« less
Superconductivity on the brink of spin-charge order in doped honeycomb bilayer
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vafek, Oskar; Murray, James; Cvetkovic, Vladimir
2014-03-01
Using a controlled weak-coupling renormalization group approach, we establish the mechanism of unconventional superconductivity in the vicinity of spin or charge ordered excitonic states for the case of electrons on the Bernal stacked bilayer honeycomb lattice. With one electron per site this system exhibits nearly parabolically touching conduction and valence bands. Such a state is unstable towards a spontaneous symmetry breaking, and repulsive interactions favor excitonic order, such as a charge nematic and/or a layer antiferromagnet. We find that upon adding charge carriers to the system, the excitonic order is suppressed, and unconventional superconductivity appears in its place, before it is replaced by a Fermi liquid. We focus on firmly establishing this phenomenon using the RG formalism within an idealized model with parabolic touching. This work was supported by the NSF CAREER award under Grant No. DMR-0955561 (OV), NSF Cooperative Agreement No. DMR-0654118, and the State of Florida (OV,JM,CV), as well as by ICAM-I2CAM (NSF grant DMR-0844115) and by DoE Award DE-FG02-08ER46544 (JM).
Stability of the antiferromagnetic state in the electron doped iridates
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bhowal, Sayantika; Moradi Kurdestany, Jamshid; Satpathy, Sashi
2018-06-01
Iridates such as Sr2IrO4 are of considerable interest owing to the formation of the Mott insulating state driven by a large spin–orbit coupling. However, in contrast to the expectation from the Nagaoka theorem that a single doped hole or electron destroys the anti-ferromagnetic (AFM) state of the half-filled Hubbard model in the large U limit, the anti-ferromagnetism persists in the doped Iridates for a large dopant concentration beyond half-filling. With a tight-binding description of the relevant states by the third-neighbor (t 1, t 2, t 3, U) Hubbard model on the square lattice, we examine the stability of the AFM state to the formation of a spin spiral state in the strong coupling limit. The third-neighbor interaction t 3 is important for the description of the Fermi surface of the electron doped system. A phase diagram in the parameter space is obtained for the regions of stability of the AFM state. Our results qualitatively explain the robustness of the AFM state in the electron doped iridate (such as Sr2‑x La x IrO4), observed in many experiments, where the AFM state continues to be stable until a critical dopant concentration.
Hyperfine field and magnetic structure in the B phase of CeCoIn5
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Graf, Matthias J; Curro, Nicholas J; Young, Ben - Li
2009-01-01
We re-analyze Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectra observed at low temperatures and high magnetic fields in the field-induced B-phase of CeCoIn{sub 5}. The NMR spectra are consistent with incommensurate antiferromagnetic order of the Ce magnetic moments. However, we find that the spectra of the In(2) sites depend critically on the direction of the ordered moments, the ordering wavevector and the symmetry of the hyperfine coupling to the Ce spins. Assuming isotropic hyperfine coupling, the NMR spectra observed for H {parallel} [100] are consistent with magnetic order with wavevector Q = {pi}(1+{delta}/a, 1/a, 1/c) and Ce moments ordered antiferromagnetically along themore » [100] direction in real space. If the hyperfine coupling has dipolar symmetry, then the NMR spectra require Ce moments along the [001] direction. The dipolar scenario is also consistent with recent neutron scattering measurements that find an ordered moment of 0.15{micro}{sub B} along [001] and Q{sub n} = {pi}(1+{delta}/a, 1+{delta}c, 1/c) with incommensuration {delta} = 0.12 for field H {parallel} [1{bar 1}0]. Using these parameters, we find that the hyperfine field is consistent with both experiments. We speculate that the B phase of CeCoIn{sub 5} represents an intrinsic phase of modulated superconductivity and antiferromagnetism that can only emerge in a highly clean system.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Smirnov, A. I.; Soldatov, T. A.; Petrenko, O. A.; Takata, A.; Kida, T.; Hagiwara, M.; Zhitomirsky, M. E.; Shapiro, A. Ya
2018-03-01
Magnetisation measurements and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra of a doped quasi two dimensional (2D) antiferromagnet on a triangular lattice Rb1 ‑ x K x Fe(MoO4)2 reveal a crucial change of the ground state spin configuration and a disappearance of a characteristic 1/3-magnetisation plateau at x = 0.15. According to theory for triangular antiferromagnets with a weak random modulation of the exchange bonds, this is a result of the competition between the structural and dynamic disorders. The dynamic zero-point or thermal fluctuations are known to lift the degeneracy of the mean field ground state of a triangular antiferromagnet and cause the spin configuration to be the most collinear, while the static disorder provides another selection of the ground state, with the least collinear structure. Low-level doping (x ≤ 0.15) was found to decrease the Néel temperature and saturation field by only few percent, while the magnetisation plateau disappears completely and the spin configuration is drastically changed. ESR spectra confirm an impurity-induced change of the so-called Y-type structure to an inverted Y-structure for x = 0.15. For x = 0.075 the intermediate regime with the decrease of width and weakening of flattening of 1/3-plateau was found.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nishitani, Junichi, E-mail: jnishitani@issp.u-tokyo.ac.jp; Lippmaa, Mikk; Suemoto, Tohru
The dynamics of photoexcited electrons in various excited d-states was investigated in a transition metal oxide MnO by tunable optical pump-terahertz probe measurements. Photoexcited electrons in the lowest excited d-state showed the longest relaxation time among the three excited d-states that are accessible in MnO at room temperature. The relaxation rate in the lowest excited d-state showed a drastic increase below the Neel temperature T{sub N} = 120 K in MnO. We conclude that this increase is caused by the appearance of a decay channel related to magnetic-excitation-assisted photoluminescence from self-trapped exciton (STE) states. The opening of relaxation channels to the STE statesmore » in an antiferromagnetic phase suggests that it may be possible to control photocarrier lifetime by magnetic order in transition metal oxides.« less
Boechat, B; Florencio, J; Saguia, A; de Alcantara Bonfim, O F
2014-03-01
We study the ground-state properties of a spin-1/2 model on a chain containing four-spin Ising-like interactions in the presence of both transverse and longitudinal magnetic fields. We use entanglement entropy and finite-size scaling methods to obtain the phase diagrams of the model. Our numerical calculations reveal a rich variety of phases and the existence of multicritical points in the system. We identify phases with both ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic orderings. We also find periodically modulated orderings formed by a cluster of like spins followed by another cluster of opposite like spins. The quantum phases in the model are found to be separated by either first- or second-order transition lines.
Spatially Resolved Large Magnetization in Ultrathin BiFeO 3
Guo, Er-Jia; Petrie, Jonathan R.; Roldan, Manuel A.; ...
2017-06-19
Complex interactions across the interface in heterostructures can generate novel functionalities not present in the constituent materials. Here, we create a unique ferromagnetic ground state out of normally antiferromagnetic BiFeO 3 (BFO) by interleaving it with layers of ferromagnetic La 0.7Sr 0.3MnO 3. Intriguingly, we found that the magnetization of BFO was aligned opposite to that of the manganite layers. Based on polarized neutron reflectometry (PNR) depth profiling of custom-designed layers, we obtained a net magnetization in the BFO layers of 275 kA/m (~1.83 B/Fe) at 10 K, which is two times larger than the previously reported values. Additionally, ferromagneticmore » order in the BFO persists up to 200 K, which is much higher than previously seen in BFO heterostructures. Our unprecedented understanding of the evolution of magnetism and functional coupling across the interface between antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic layers provides a blueprint towards advanced spintronic devices.« less
Quantum magnetic phase transition in square-octagon lattice.
Bao, An; Tao, Hong-Shuai; Liu, Hai-Di; Zhang, XiaoZhong; Liu, Wu-Ming
2014-11-05
Quantum magnetic phase transition in square-octagon lattice was investigated by cellular dynamical mean field theory combining with continuous time quantum Monte Carlo algorithm. Based on the systematic calculation on the density of states, the double occupancy and the Fermi surface evolution of square-octagon lattice, we presented the phase diagrams of this splendid many particle system. The competition between the temperature and the on-site repulsive interaction in the isotropic square-octagon lattice has shown that both antiferromagnetic and paramagnetic order can be found not only in the metal phase, but also in the insulating phase. Antiferromagnetic metal phase disappeared in the phase diagram that consists of the anisotropic parameter λ and the on-site repulsive interaction U while the other phases still can be detected at T = 0.17. The results found in this work may contribute to understand well the properties of some consuming systems that have square-octagon structure, quasi square-octagon structure, such as ZnO.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Park, S.-H.; Liu, B.-Q.; Behal, D.; Pedersen, B.; Schneidewind, A.
2018-04-01
The low temperature antiferromagnetic (AF) phase of MnWO4 (the so-called AF1 phase) exhibits different spin-canting configurations at two Mn2+ sublattices of the (3 + 1)-dimensional magnetic structure. The suggested superspace group {{\\boldsymbol P}}2.1^\\prime(α, 1/2, γ)0s is a significant consequence of the polar space group {{\\boldsymbol P}} 2 true for the nuclear structure of MnWO4. Density functional theory calculations showed that its ground state prefers this two spin-canting system. The structural difference between two independent atomic sites for Mn (Mn a , Mn b ) is too small to allow microscopically detectable electric polarisation. However, this hidden intrinsic polar character allows AF1 two commensurately modulated spin-canting textures. This is considered as the prerequisite onset of the improper ferroelectricity enhanced by the helical spin order in the multiferroic phase AF2 of MnWO4.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Drichko, Natalia; Hackl, Rudi; Schlueter, John A.
2015-10-15
Using Raman scattering, the quasi-two-dimensional organic superconductor kappa-(BEDT-TTF)(2)Cu[N(CN)(2)]Br (T-c = 11.8 K) and the related antiferromagnet kappa-(BEDT-TTF)(2)Cu[N(CN)(2)]Cl are studied. Raman scattering provides unique spectroscopic information about magnetic degrees of freedom that has been otherwise unavailable on such organic conductors. Below T = 200 K a broad band at about 500 cm(-1) develops in both compounds. We identify this band with two-magnon excitation. The position and the temperature dependence of the spectral weight are similar in the antiferromagnet and in the metallic Fermi liquid. We conclude that antiferromagnetic correlations are similarly present in the magnetic insulator and the Fermi-liquid state ofmore » the superconductor.« less
Spin liquid state in the disordered triangular lattice Sc 2Ga 2CuO 7 revealed by NMR
Khuntia, P.; Kumar, R.; Mahajan, A. V.; ...
2016-04-18
We present microscopic magnetic properties of a two-dimensional triangular lattice Sc 2Ga 2CuO 7, consisting of single and double triangular Cu planes. An antiferromagnetic (AFM) exchange interaction J/k B ≈ 35 K between Cu 2+ (S = 1/2) spins in the triangular biplane is obtained from the analysis of intrinsic magnetic susceptibility data. The intrinsic magnetic susceptibility, extracted from 71Ga NMR shift data, displays the presence of AFM short range spin correlations and remains finite down to 50 mK, suggesting a nonsinglet ground state. The nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate (1/T 1) reveals a slowing down of Cu 2+ spin fluctuationsmore » with decreasing T down to 100 mK. Magnetic specific heat (C m) and 1/T 1 exhibit power law behavior at low temperatures, implying the gapless nature of the spin excitation spectrum. The absence of long range magnetic ordering down to ~J/700, nonzero spin susceptibility at low T, and the power law behavior of C m and 1/T 1 suggest a gapless quantum spin liquid (QSL) state. Our results demonstrate that persistent spin dynamics induced by frustration maintain a quantum-disordered state at T → 0 in this triangular lattice antiferromagnet. Furthermore, this suggests that the low energy modes are dominated by spinon excitations in the QSL state due to randomness engendered by disorder and frustration.« less
Neutron scattering study of the interplay between structure and magnetism in Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lester, C.; Chu, Jiun-Haw; Analytis, J. G.; Capelli, S. C.; Erickson, A. S.; Condron, C. L.; Toney, M. F.; Fisher, I. R.; Hayden, S. M.
2009-04-01
Single-crystal neutron diffraction is used to investigate the magnetic and structural phase diagrams of the electron-doped superconductor Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 . Heat-capacity and resistivity measurements have demonstrated that Co doping this system splits the combined antiferromagnetic and structural transition present in BaFe2As2 into two distinct transitions. For x=0.025 , we find that the upper transition is between the high-temperature tetragonal and low-temperature orthorhombic structures with (TTO=99±0.5K) and the antiferromagnetic transition occurs at TAF=93±0.5K . We find that doping rapidly suppresses the antiferromagnetism, with antiferromagnetic order disappearing at x≈0.055 . However, there is a region of coexistence of antiferromagnetism and signatures of superconductivity obtained from thermodynamic and transport properties. For all the compositions studied, we find two anomalies in the temperature dependence of the structural Bragg peaks from both neutron scattering and x-ray diffraction at the same temperatures where anomalies in the heat capacity and resistivity have been previously identified. Thus for x=0.025 , where we have shown that the lower anomaly occurs at TAF , we infer that there is strong coupling between the antiferromagnetism and the crystal lattice which may persist to larger x .
Materials, Devices and Spin Transfer Torque in Antiferromagnetic Spintronics: A Concise Review
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Coileáin, Cormac Ó.; Wu, Han Chun
From historical obscurity, antiferromagnets are recently enjoying revived interest, as antiferromagnetic (AFM) materials may allow the continued reduction in size of spintronic devices. They have the benefit of being insensitive to parasitic external magnetic fields, while displaying high read/write speeds, and thus poised to become an integral part of the next generation of logical devices and memory. They are currently employed to preserve the magnetoresistive qualities of some ferromagnetic based giant or tunnel magnetoresistance systems. However, the question remains how the magnetic states of an antiferromagnet can be efficiently manipulated and detected. Here, we reflect on AFM materials for their use in spintronics, in particular, newly recognized antiferromagnet Mn2Au with its in-plane anisotropy and tetragonal structure and high Néel temperature. These attributes make it one of the most promising candidates for AFM spintronics thus far with the possibility of architectures freed from the need for ferromagnetic (FM) elements. Here, we discuss its potential for use in ferromagnet-free spintronic devices.
Antiferromagnetism in the van der Waals layered spin-lozenge semiconductor CrTe 3
McGuire, Michael A.; Garlea, V. Ovidiu; KC, Santosh; ...
2017-04-14
We have investigated the crystallographic, magnetic, and transport properties of the van der Waals bonded, layered compound CrTe 3 on single-crystal and polycrystalline materials. Furthermore, the crystal structure contains layers made up of lozenge-shaped Cr 4 tetramers. Electrical resistivity measurements show the crystals to be semiconducting, with a temperature dependence consistent with a band gap of 0.3 eV. The magnetic susceptibility exhibits a broad maximum near 300 K characteristic of low dimensional magnetic systems. Weak anomalies are observed in the susceptibility and heat capacity near 55 K, and single-crystal neutron diffraction reveals the onset of long-range antiferromagnetic order at thismore » temperature. Strongly dispersive spin waves are observed in the ordered state. Significant magnetoelastic coupling is indicated by the anomalous temperature dependence of the lattice parameters and is evident in structural optimization in van der Waals density functional theory calculations for different magnetic configurations. The cleavability of the compound is apparent from its handling and is confirmed by first-principles calculations, which predict a cleavage energy 0.5 J / m 2 , similar to graphite. Based on our results, CrTe 3 is identified as a promising compound for studies of low dimensional magnetism in bulk crystals as well as magnetic order in monolayer materials and van der Waals heterostructures.« less
Antiferromagnetism in the van der Waals layered spin-lozenge semiconductor CrTe 3
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
McGuire, Michael A.; Garlea, V. Ovidiu; KC, Santosh
We have investigated the crystallographic, magnetic, and transport properties of the van der Waals bonded, layered compound CrTe 3 on single-crystal and polycrystalline materials. Furthermore, the crystal structure contains layers made up of lozenge-shaped Cr 4 tetramers. Electrical resistivity measurements show the crystals to be semiconducting, with a temperature dependence consistent with a band gap of 0.3 eV. The magnetic susceptibility exhibits a broad maximum near 300 K characteristic of low dimensional magnetic systems. Weak anomalies are observed in the susceptibility and heat capacity near 55 K, and single-crystal neutron diffraction reveals the onset of long-range antiferromagnetic order at thismore » temperature. Strongly dispersive spin waves are observed in the ordered state. Significant magnetoelastic coupling is indicated by the anomalous temperature dependence of the lattice parameters and is evident in structural optimization in van der Waals density functional theory calculations for different magnetic configurations. The cleavability of the compound is apparent from its handling and is confirmed by first-principles calculations, which predict a cleavage energy 0.5 J / m 2 , similar to graphite. Based on our results, CrTe 3 is identified as a promising compound for studies of low dimensional magnetism in bulk crystals as well as magnetic order in monolayer materials and van der Waals heterostructures.« less
Spin density wave instability in a ferromagnet.
Wu, Yan; Ning, Zhenhua; Cao, Huibo; Cao, Guixin; Benavides, Katherine A; Karna, S; McCandless, Gregory T; Jin, R; Chan, Julia Y; Shelton, W A; DiTusa, J F
2018-03-27
Due to its cooperative nature, magnetic ordering involves a complex interplay between spin, charge, and lattice degrees of freedom, which can lead to strong competition between magnetic states. Binary Fe 3 Ga 4 is one such material that exhibits competing orders having a ferromagnetic (FM) ground state, an antiferromagnetic (AFM) behavior at intermediate temperatures, and a conspicuous re-entrance of the FM state at high temperature. Through a combination of neutron diffraction experiments and simulations, we have discovered that the AFM state is an incommensurate spin-density wave (ISDW) ordering generated by nesting in the spin polarized Fermi surface. These two magnetic states, FM and ISDW, are seldom observed in the same material without application of a polarizing magnetic field. To date, this unusual mechanism has never been observed and its elemental origins could have far reaching implications in many other magnetic systems that contain strong competition between these types of magnetic order. Furthermore, the competition between magnetic states results in a susceptibility to external perturbations allowing the magnetic transitions in Fe 3 Ga 4 to be controlled via temperature, magnetic field, disorder, and pressure. Thus, Fe 3 Ga 4 has potential for application in novel magnetic memory devices, such as the magnetic components of tunneling magnetoresistance spintronics devices.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chan, C. H.; Brown, G.; Rikvold, P. A.
2017-05-01
A generalized approach to Wang-Landau simulations, macroscopically constrained Wang-Landau, is proposed to simulate the density of states of a system with multiple macroscopic order parameters. The method breaks a multidimensional random-walk process in phase space into many separate, one-dimensional random-walk processes in well-defined subspaces. Each of these random walks is constrained to a different set of values of the macroscopic order parameters. When the multivariable density of states is obtained for one set of values of fieldlike model parameters, the density of states for any other values of these parameters can be obtained by a simple transformation of the total system energy. All thermodynamic quantities of the system can then be rapidly calculated at any point in the phase diagram. We demonstrate how to use the multivariable density of states to draw the phase diagram, as well as order-parameter probability distributions at specific phase points, for a model spin-crossover material: an antiferromagnetic Ising model with ferromagnetic long-range interactions. The fieldlike parameters in this model are an effective magnetic field and the strength of the long-range interaction.
Kobayashi, Riki; Yoshizawa, Hideki; Matsuda, Masaaki; ...
2015-05-25
In this paper, the Nd-moment order in the layered nickelate Nd 2-xSr xNiO 4 (x = 0.7) has been investigated by performing a neutron diffraction experiment using a single crystal sample. First, the checkerboard (CB)-type charge order was confirmed by observing the temperature dependence of the nuclear superlattice peak at Q=(5,0,0) between 1.9 and 300 K, which indicates that the transition temperature of the CB-type charge order is above 300 K. Magnetic superlattice peaks with the propagation vector k=(1-ε,0,1) appear below 67 K, and the value of ε was determined to be 0.455 in good agreement with previous studies. Themore » intensity of the magnetic superlattice peaks appearing below 67 K shows a sharp increase below ≈20 K. This behavior indicates that the Nd moments freeze under the influence of the Ni ordering. The CB-type antiferromagnetic (AFM) Ni order in the NiO 2 layers is stacked antiferromagnetically in the c-axis direction, while the Nd moments in the Nd/SrO 2 layers are coupled antiferromagnetically with the Ni moments. Finally, the Nd moments are parallel to the c-axis, while the Ni moments are canted towards the c-axis direction from the basal ab-plane at low temperatures where the Nd moments are well ordered.« less
Xu, Min; Wang, Li -Min; Peng, Rui; ...
2015-02-01
With angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we studied the electronic structure of TaFe₁̣₂₃Te₃, a two-leg spin ladder compound with a novel antiferromagnetic ground state. Quasi-two-dimensional Fermi surface is observed, with sizable inter-ladder hopping. Moreover, instead of observing an energy gap at the Fermi surface in the antiferromagnetic state, we observed the shifts of various bands. Combining these observations with density-functional-theory calculations, we propose that the large scale reconstruction of the electronic structure, caused by the interactions between coexisting itinerant electrons and local moments, is most likely the driving force of the magnetic transition. Thus TaFe₁̣₂₃Te₃ serves as a simpler platform that containsmore » similar ingredients as the parent compounds of iron-based superconductors.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Matsuda, M.; Onishi, H.; Okutani, A.
Here, BaCo 2V 2O 8 consists of Co chains in which a Co 2+ ion carries a fictitious spin 1/2 with Ising anisotropy. We performed elastic and inelastic neutron scattering experiments in BaCo 2V 2O 8 in a magnetic field perpendicular to the c axis which is the chain direction. With applying magnetic field along the a axis at 3.5 K, the antiferromagnetic order with the easy axis along the c axis, observed in zero magnetic field, is completely suppressed at 8 T, while the magnetic field gradually induces an antiferromagnetic order with the spin component along the b axis.more » We also studied magnetic excitations as a function of transverse magnetic field. The lower boundary of the spinon excitations splits gradually with increasing magnetic field. The overall feature of the magnetic excitation spectra in the magnetic field is reproduced by the theoretical calculation based on the spin 1/2 XXZ antiferromagnetic chain model, which predicts that the dynamic magnetic structure factor of the spin component along the chain direction is enhanced and that along the field direction has clear incommensurate correlations.« less
Matsuda, M.; Onishi, H.; Okutani, A.; ...
2017-07-25
Here, BaCo 2V 2O 8 consists of Co chains in which a Co 2+ ion carries a fictitious spin 1/2 with Ising anisotropy. We performed elastic and inelastic neutron scattering experiments in BaCo 2V 2O 8 in a magnetic field perpendicular to the c axis which is the chain direction. With applying magnetic field along the a axis at 3.5 K, the antiferromagnetic order with the easy axis along the c axis, observed in zero magnetic field, is completely suppressed at 8 T, while the magnetic field gradually induces an antiferromagnetic order with the spin component along the b axis.more » We also studied magnetic excitations as a function of transverse magnetic field. The lower boundary of the spinon excitations splits gradually with increasing magnetic field. The overall feature of the magnetic excitation spectra in the magnetic field is reproduced by the theoretical calculation based on the spin 1/2 XXZ antiferromagnetic chain model, which predicts that the dynamic magnetic structure factor of the spin component along the chain direction is enhanced and that along the field direction has clear incommensurate correlations.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Matsuda, M.; Onishi, H.; Okutani, A.; Ma, J.; Agrawal, H.; Hong, T.; Pajerowski, D. M.; Copley, J. R. D.; Okunishi, K.; Mori, M.; Kimura, S.; Hagiwara, M.
2017-07-01
BaCo2V2O8 consists of Co chains in which a Co2 + ion carries a fictitious spin 1/2 with Ising anisotropy. We performed elastic and inelastic neutron scattering experiments in BaCo2V2O8 in a magnetic field perpendicular to the c axis which is the chain direction. With applying magnetic field along the a axis at 3.5 K, the antiferromagnetic order with the easy axis along the c axis, observed in zero magnetic field, is completely suppressed at 8 T, while the magnetic field gradually induces an antiferromagnetic order with the spin component along the b axis. We also studied magnetic excitations as a function of transverse magnetic field. The lower boundary of the spinon excitations splits gradually with increasing magnetic field. The overall feature of the magnetic excitation spectra in the magnetic field is reproduced by the theoretical calculation based on the spin 1/2 X X Z antiferromagnetic chain model, which predicts that the dynamic magnetic structure factor of the spin component along the chain direction is enhanced and that along the field direction has clear incommensurate correlations.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Turov, Evgenii A.; Shavrov, Vladimir G.
1983-07-01
This review of some aspects of the magnetoacoustics of ferro- and antiferromagnetic materials has been written in connection with the 25th anniversary of the rise of this field of physics of magnetic phenomena. Primary attention is paid to relatively new problems that have not been reflected in the existing monographs and reviews. The topic is a group of linear magnetoacoustic effects that manifest spontaneous symmetry breaking caused by magnetic ordering in a system of two coupled fields: the magnetization field M (r) and the deformation field uij(r). To some extent these effects are analogous to the Higgs effect in the theory of elementary particles (the Higgs mechanism of the origin of the mass of a particle) or the Meissner effect in the theory of superconductivity. A direct analog of the stated effects is the so-called magnetoelastic gap in the magnon spectrum, while an analog of an accompanying effect is the softening of the quasiacoustic modes interacting with it (up to the vanishing of the corresponding dynamic elastic moduli). However, a characteristic feature of such effects in crystalline (anisotropic) magnetic materials is that they are manifested mainly near points of magnetic (spin-reorientation) phase transitions. This review treats the coupled magnetoelastic waves in ferro- and antiferromagnetic materials of different types that show phase transitions with respect to temperature, magnetic field, or pressure.
Emergence of ferromagnetism in antiferromagnetic TbMnO3 by epitaxial strain
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Marti, X.; Skumryev, V.; Ferrater, C.; García-Cuenca, M. V.; Varela, M.; Sánchez, F.; Fontcuberta, J.
2010-05-01
We show that in oxide thin films of spiral antiferromagnetic orthorhombic TbMnO3, ferromagnetism emerges resulting from epitaxially induced strain. The unit cell volume can be tuned (contracting up to a 2%) by varying thickness and deposition conditions; it is found that the ferromagnetic response correlates with the unit cell deformation. Such effect of strain on the magnetic properties turns out to be similar to that occurring in collinear orthorhombic antiferromagnets such as YMnO3. Owing to the intimate relationship between magnetic order and ferroelectricity in TbMnO3 these results may provide a new route to induce magnetoelectric coupling and tailor their ferroelectric response.
Magnetic ground state of the multiferroic hexagonal LuFe O3
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suresh, Pittala; Vijaya Laxmi, K.; Bera, A. K.; Yusuf, S. M.; Chittari, Bheema Lingam; Jung, Jeil; Anil Kumar, P. S.
2018-05-01
The structural, electric, and magnetic properties of bulk hexagonal LuFe O3 are investigated. Single phase hexagonal LuFe O3 has been successfully stabilized in the bulk form without any doping by sol-gel method. The hexagonal crystal structure with P 63c m space group has been confirmed by x-ray-diffraction, neutron-diffraction, and Raman spectroscopy study at room temperature. Neutron diffraction confirms the hexagonal phase of LuFe O3 persists down to 6 K. Further, the x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy established the 3+ oxidation state of Fe ions. The temperature-dependent magnetic dc susceptibility, specific heat, and neutron-diffraction studies confirm an antiferromagnetic ordering below the Néel temperature (TN)˜130 K . Analysis of magnetic neutron-diffraction patterns reveals an in-plane (a b -plane) 120∘ antiferromagnetic structure, characterized by a propagation vector k =(0 0 0 ) with an ordered moment of 2.84 μB/F e3 + at 6 K. The 120∘ antifferomagnetic ordering is further confirmed by spin-orbit coupling density functional theory calculations. The on-site coulomb interaction (U ) and Hund's parameter (JH) on Fe atoms reproduced the neutron-diffraction Γ1 spin pattern among the Fe atoms. P -E loop measurements at room temperature confirm an intrinsic ferroelectricity of the sample with remnant polarization Pr˜0.18 μ C /c m2 . A clear anomaly in the dielectric data is observed at ˜TN revealing the presence of magnetoelectric coupling. A change in the lattice constants at TN has also been found, indicating the presence of a strong magnetoelastic coupling. Thus a coupling between lattice, electric, and magnetic degrees of freedom is established in bulk hexagonal LuFe O3 .
Magnetically induced ferroelectricity in Bi2CuO4
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhao, L.; Guo, H.; Schmidt, W.; Nemkovski, K.; Mostovoy, M.; Komarek, A. C.
2017-08-01
The tetragonal copper oxide Bi2CuO4 has an unusual crystal structure with a three-dimensional network of well separated CuO4 plaquettes. The spin structure of Bi2CuO4 in the magnetically ordered state below TN˜43 K remains controversial. Here we present the results of detailed studies of specific heat, magnetic, and dielectric properties of Bi2CuO4 single crystals grown by the floating zone technique, combined with the polarized neutron scattering and high-resolution x-ray measurements. Down to 3.5 K our polarized neutron scattering measurements reveal ordered magnetic Cu moments which are aligned within the a b plane. Below the onset of the long range antiferromagnetic ordering we observe an electric polarization induced by an applied magnetic field, which indicates inversion symmetry breaking by the ordered state of Cu spins. For the magnetic field applied perpendicular to the tetragonal axis, the spin-induced ferroelectricity is explained in terms of the linear magnetoelectric effect that occurs in a metastable magnetic state. A relatively small electric polarization induced by the field parallel to the tetragonal axis may indicate a more complex magnetic ordering in Bi2CuO4 .
Extinction of quasiparticle interference in underdoped cuprates with coexisting order
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Andersen, Brian M.; Hirschfeld, P. J.
2009-04-01
Scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) measurements [Y. Kohsaka , Nature (London) 454, 1072 (2008)] have shown that dispersing quasiparticle interference (QPI) peaks in Fourier-transformed conductance maps disappear as the bias voltage exceeds a certain threshold corresponding to the coincidence of the contour of constant quasiparticle energy with the period-doubled (e.g., antiferromagnetic) zone boundary. Here we show that this may be caused by coexisting order present in the d -wave superconducting phase. We show explicitly how QPI peaks are extinguished in the situation with coexisting long-range spin-density wave order and discuss the connection with the more realistic case where short-range order is created by quenched disorder. Since it is the localized QPI peaks rather than the underlying antinodal states themselves which are destroyed at a critical bias, our proposal resolves a conflict between STS and photoemission spectroscopy regarding the nature of these states. We also study the momentum-summed density of states in the coexisting phase and show how the competing order produces a kink inside the “V”-shaped d -wave superconducting gap in agreement with recent STS measurements [J. W. Alldredge , Nat. Phys. 4, 319 (2008)].
Brambleby, Jamie; Manson, Jamie L.; Goddard, Paul A.; ...
2017-04-20
The magnetic ground state of the quasi-one-dimensional spin-1 antiferromagnetic chain is sensitive to the relative sizes of the single-ion anisotropy (D) and the intrachain (J) and interchain (J') exchange interactions. The ratios D/J and J' /J dictate the material's placement in one of three competing phases: a Haldane gapped phase, a quantum paramagnet, and an XY-ordered state, with a quantum critical point at their junction. We have identified [Ni(HF 2)(pyz) 2] SbF 6, where pyz = pyrazine, as a rare candidate in which this behavior can be explored in detail. Combining neutron scattering (elastic and inelastic) in applied magnetic fieldsmore » of up to 10 tesla and magnetization measurements in fields of up to 60 tesla with numerical modeling of experimental observables, we are able to obtain accurate values of all of the parameters of the Hamiltonian [D = 13.3(1) K, J = 10.4(3) K, and J' = 1.4(2) K], despite the polycrystalline nature of the sample. Density-functional theory calculations result in similar couplings (J = 9.2 K, J' = 1.8 K) and predict that the majority of the total spin population resides on the Ni(II) ion, while the remaining spin density is delocalized over both ligand types. Finally, the general procedures outlined in this paper permit phase boundaries and quantum-critical points to be explored in anisotropic systems for which single crystals are as yet unavailable.« less
Effect of Coulomb Correlation on the Magnetic Properties of Mn Clusters.
Huang, Chengxi; Zhou, Jian; Deng, Kaiming; Kan, Erjun; Jena, Puru
2018-05-03
In spite of decades of research, a fundamental understanding of the unusual magnetic behavior of small Mn clusters remains a challenge. Experiments show that Mn 2 is antiferromagnetic while small clusters containing up to five Mn atoms are ferromagnetic with magnetic moments of 5 μ B /atom and become ferrimagnetic as they grow further. Theoretical studies based on density functional theory (DFT), however, find Mn 2 to be ferromagnetic, with ferrimagnetic order setting in at different sizes that depend upon the computational methods used. While quantum chemical techniques correctly account for the antiferromagnetic ground state of Mn 2 , they are computationally too demanding to treat larger clusters, making it difficult to understand the evolution of magnetism. These studies clearly point to the importance of correlation and the need to find ways to treat it effectively for larger clusters and nanostructures. Here, we show that the DFT+ U method can be used to account for strong correlation. We determine the on-site Coulomb correlation, Hubbard U self-consistently by using the linear response theory and study its effect on the magnetic coupling of Mn clusters containing up to five atoms. With a calculated U value of 4.8 eV, we show that the ground state of Mn 2 is antiferromagnetic with a Mn-Mn distance of 3.34 Å, which agrees well with the electron spin resonance experiment. Equally important, we show that on-site Coulomb correlation also plays an important role in the evolution of magnetic coupling in larger clusters, as the results differ significantly from standard DFT calculations. We conclude that for a proper understanding of magnetism of Mn nanostructures (clusters, chains, and layers) one must take into account the effect of strong correlation.
Wang, Guoxiu; Liu, Hao; Horvat, Josip; Wang, Bei; Qiao, Shizhang; Park, Jinsoo; Ahn, Hyojun
2010-09-24
Highly ordered mesoporous Co(3)O(4) nanostructures were prepared using KIT-6 and SBA-15 silica as hard templates. The structures were confirmed by small angle X-ray diffraction, high resolution transmission electron microscopy, and N(2) adsorption-desorption isotherm analysis. Both KIT-6 cubic and SBA-15 hexagonal mesoporous Co(3)O(4) samples exhibited a low Néel temperature and bulk antiferromagnetic coupling due to geometric confinement of antiferromagnetic order within the nanoparticles. Mesoporous Co(3)O(4) electrode materials have demonstrated the high lithium storage capacity of more than 1200 mAh g(-1) with an excellent cycle life. They also exhibited a high specific capacitance of 370 F g(-1) as electrodes in supercapacitors.
Determinant quantum Monte Carlo study of the two-dimensional single-band Hubbard-Holstein model
Johnston, S.; Nowadnick, E. A.; Kung, Y. F.; ...
2013-06-24
Here, we performed numerical studies of the Hubbard-Holstein model in two dimensions using determinant quantum Monte Carlo (DQMC). We also present details of the method, emphasizing the treatment of the lattice degrees of freedom, and then study the filling and behavior of the fermion sign as a function of model parameters. We find a region of parameter space with large Holstein coupling where the fermion sign recovers despite large values of the Hubbard interaction. This indicates that studies of correlated polarons at finite carrier concentrations are likely accessible to DQMC simulations. We then restrict ourselves to the half-filled model andmore » examine the evolution of the antiferromagnetic structure factor, other metrics for antiferromagnetic and charge-density-wave order, and energetics of the electronic and lattice degrees of freedom as a function of electron-phonon coupling. From this we find further evidence for a competition between charge-density-wave and antiferromagnetic order at half- filling.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Badiev, M. K., E-mail: m-zagir@mail.ru; Murtazaev, A. K.; Ramazanov, M. K.
2016-10-15
The phase transitions (PTs) and critical properties of the antiferromagnetic Ising model on a layered (stacked) triangular lattice have been studied by the Monte Carlo method using a replica algorithm with allowance for the next-nearest-neighbor interactions. The character of PTs is analyzed using the histogram technique and the method of Binder cumulants. It is established that the transition from the disordered to paramagnetic phase in the adopted model is a second-order PT. Static critical exponents of the heat capacity (α), susceptibility (γ), order parameter (β), and correlation radius (ν) and the Fischer exponent η are calculated using the finite-size scalingmore » theory. It is shown that (i) the antiferromagnetic Ising model on a layered triangular lattice belongs to the XY universality class of critical behavior and (ii) allowance for the intralayer interactions of next-nearest neighbors in the adopted model leads to a change in the universality class of critical behavior.« less
Magnetic excitations in the spin-1/2 triangular-lattice antiferromagnet Cs 2CuBr 4
Zvyagin, S. A.; Ozerov, M.; Kamenskyi, D.; ...
2015-11-27
We present on high- field electron spin resonance (ESR) studies of magnetic excitations in the spin- 1/2 triangular-lattice antiferromagnet Cs 2CuBr 4. Frequency- field diagrams of ESR excitations are measured for different orientations of magnetic fields up to 25 T. We show that the substantial zero- field energy gap, Δ ≈ 9.5 K, observed in the low-temperature excitation spectrum of Cs 2CuBr 4 [Zvyagin et al:, Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 077206 (2014)], is present well above T N. Noticeably, the transition into the long-range magnetically ordered phase does not significantly affect the size of the gap, suggesting that even belowmore » T N the high-energy spin dynamics in Cs 2CuBr 4 is determined by short-range-order spin correlations. The experimental data are compared with results of model spin-wave-theory calculations for spin-1/2 triangle-lattice antiferromagnet.« less
Magnetic and electrical properties of Nd7Pt3 studied on single crystals
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tsutaoka, Takanori; Ueda, Koyo; Matsushita, Takuya
2018-07-01
Magnetic and electrical properties of Nd7Pt3 with the Th7Fe3 type hexagonal structure have been studied on single crystals by measuring magnetization, magnetic susceptibility and electrical resistivity. Nd7Pt3 possesses a ferromagnetic state below TC = 38 K; a canted antiferromagnetic state takes place at Tt2 = 34 K. Another magnetic phase transition has also been observed at Tt1 = 25 K. The magnetization curve along the a- and b-axes at 2 K shows anomalous first-order irreversible behavior. The direction of the magnetic moment in the canted state can be tilted from the c-plane. Electrical resistivity measurement results show metallic property; three anomalies were observed at Tt1, Tt2 and TC, respectively.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lunkenheimer, Peter; Müller, Jens; Krohns, Stephan; Schrettle, Florian; Loidl, Alois; Hartmann, Benedikt; Rommel, Robert; de Souza, Mariano; Hotta, Chisa; Schlueter, John A.; Lang, Michael
2012-09-01
Multiferroics, showing simultaneous ordering of electrical and magnetic degrees of freedom, are remarkable materials as seen from both the academic and technological points of view. A prominent mechanism of multiferroicity is the spin-driven ferroelectricity, often found in frustrated antiferromagnets with helical spin order. There, as for conventional ferroelectrics, the electrical dipoles arise from an off-centre displacement of ions. However, recently a different mechanism, namely purely electronic ferroelectricity, where charge order breaks inversion symmetry, has attracted considerable interest. Here we provide evidence for ferroelectricity, accompanied by antiferromagnetic spin order, in a two-dimensional organic charge-transfer salt, thus representing a new class of multiferroics. We propose a charge-order-driven mechanism leading to electronic ferroelectricity in this material. Quite unexpectedly for electronic ferroelectrics, dipolar and spin order arise nearly simultaneously. This can be ascribed to the loss of spin frustration induced by the ferroelectric ordering. Hence, here the spin order is driven by the ferroelectricity, in marked contrast to the spin-driven ferroelectricity in helical magnets.
Infinite-range Heisenberg model and high-temperature superconductivity
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tahir-Kheli, Jamil; Goddard, William A., III
1993-11-01
A strongly coupled variational wave function, the doublet spin-projected Néel state (DSPN), is proposed for oxygen holes in three-band models of high-temperature superconductors. This wave function has the three-spin system of the oxygen hole plus the two neighboring copper atoms coupled in a spin-1/2 doublet. The copper spins in the neighborhood of a hole are in an eigenstate of the infinite-range Heisenberg antiferromagnet (SPN state). The doublet three-spin magnetic polaron or hopping polaron (HP) is stabilized by the hopping terms tσ and tτ, rather than by the copper-oxygen antiferromagnetic coupling Jpd. Although, the HP has a large projection onto the Emery (Dg) polaron, a non-negligible amount of doublet-u (Du) character is required for optimal hopping stabilization. This is due to Jdd, the copper-copper antiferromagnetic coupling. For the copper spins near an oxygen hole, the copper-copper antiferromagnetic coupling can be considered to be almost infinite ranged, since the copper-spin-correlation length in the superconducting phase (0.06-0.25 holes per in-plane copper) is approximately equal to the mean separation of the holes (between 2 and 4 lattice spacings). The general DSPN wave function is constructed for the motion of a single quasiparticle in an antiferromagnetic background. The SPN state allows simple calculations of various couplings of the oxygen hole with the copper spins. The energy minimum is found at symmetry (π/2,π/2) and the bandwidth scales with Jdd. These results are in agreement with exact computations on a lattice. The coupling of the quasiparticles leads to an attraction of holes and its magnitude is estimated.
Spin-1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on an anisotropic triangular lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Starykh, Oleg
2007-03-01
The Triangular lattice spin-1/2 Heisenberg AntiFerromagnet (TAF) is a prototypical model of frustrated quantum magnetism. While it is believed to exhibit long-range order in the isotropic limit, changes such as spatial anisotropy can alter the delicate balance amongst competing ground states. I will describe the static and dynamic properties of the spatially anisotropic TAF, with inter-chain diagonal exchange J' much weaker than the intrachain exchange J. Treating J' as a perturbation of decoupled Heisenberg spin-1/2 chains, I find that the ground state is spontaneously dimerized in a four-fold degenerate zig-zag pattern. This dimerization instability is driven by quantum fluctuations, which are dramatically enhanced here by the frustrated nature of inter-chain exchange. A magnetic field partially relieves frustration, by canting the spins along the field direction, and causes a quantum phase transition into a magnetically-ordered spin-density-wave phase. This is followed by cone and, finally, fully polarized (saturated) phases, as a function of increasing magnetic field. I show that many of these features are in fact observed in experiments on the celebrated material Cs2CuCl4 (J'/J =1/3). I will also discuss the significant modification of the phase diagram by symmetry-breaking anisotropic Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya (DM) interactions, present in this interesting magnet. In addition to static and thermodynamic properties, the proposed ``one-dimensional'' approach offers a compelling explanation of the unusual experimentally measured dynamical structure factor of Cs2CuCl4 in terms of descendants of one-dimensional spinons. Quite generally, I find characteristic features of a momentum-dependent spinon bound state and a dispersing incoherent excitation in the structure factor, in agreement with experiments.
Bold Diagrammatic Monte Carlo Method Applied to Fermionized Frustrated Spins
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kulagin, S. A.; Prokof'ev, N.; Starykh, O. A.; Svistunov, B.; Varney, C. N.
2013-02-01
We demonstrate, by considering the triangular lattice spin-1/2 Heisenberg model, that Monte Carlo sampling of skeleton Feynman diagrams within the fermionization framework offers a universal first-principles tool for strongly correlated lattice quantum systems. We observe the fermionic sign blessing—cancellation of higher order diagrams leading to a finite convergence radius of the series. We calculate the magnetic susceptibility of the triangular-lattice quantum antiferromagnet in the correlated paramagnet regime and reveal a surprisingly accurate microscopic correspondence with its classical counterpart at all accessible temperatures. The extrapolation of the observed relation to zero temperature suggests the absence of the magnetic order in the ground state. We critically examine the implications of this unusual scenario.
Charge distribution consequences of the magnetic order in TbB6
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Galéra, R. M.; Amara, M.; Aviani, I.; Givord, F.; Zontone, F.; Kunii, S.
2006-09-01
The antiferromagnetic state of TbB6 has been investigated by way of magnetostriction and X-ray scattering measurements on a single crystal. The magnetostriction data reveal a well defined tetragonal symmetry lowering and a weak volume increase below TN . The X-ray scattering investigation shows charge satellites, related to the 00 and 0 wave vectors stars. The 00 satellites are characteristic of exchange displacement waves, similar to those observed in GdB6, whereas the 0 ones could result as well from 4f multipolar scattering.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Matsubayashi, K.; Hirayama, T.; Yamashita, T.; Ohara, S.; Kawamura, N.; Mizumaki, M.; Ishimatsu, N.; Watanabe, S.; Kitagawa, K.; Uwatoko, Y.
2015-02-01
We report electrical resistivity, ac magnetic susceptibility, and x-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements of intermediate valence YbNi3Ga9 under pressure and magnetic field. We have revealed a characteristic pressure-induced Yb valence crossover within the temperature-pressure phase diagram, and a first-order metamagnetic transition is found below Pc˜9 GPa where the system undergoes a pressure-induced antiferromagnetic transition. As a possible origin of the metamagnetic behavior, a critical valence fluctuation emerging near the critical point of the first-order valence transition is discussed on the basis of the temperature-field-pressure phase diagram.
Spin correlated dielectric memory and rejuvenation in multiferroic CuCrS{sub 2}
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Karmakar, A.; Dey, K.; Majumdar, S.
We report a rare consequence of memory effect in dielectric response (ϵ) and magnetic field induced rejuvenation in a relaxor-type multiferroic chalcogenide, CuCrS{sub 2}. Despite reasonably high conductivity, we are able to detect significant spontaneous polarization using an improvised technique verifying ferroelectric (FE) order. Concomitant appearance of both FE and antiferromagnetic orders authenticates multiferroicity. A smeared out FE transition and strong frequency dependence of the broadened peak in ϵ obeying Dynamical scaling law signify relaxor properties. We discuss the role of geometrical frustration in the antiferromagnetically coupled layered triangular lattice and metal ligand hybridization for these unusual properties.
Magnetic Ordering of Antiferromagnetic Trimer System 2b·3CuCl2·2H2O
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sanda, M.; Kubo, K.; Asano, T.; Morodomi, H.; Inagaki, Y.; Kawae, T.; Wang, J.; Matsuo, A.; Kindo, K.; Sato, T. J.
2012-12-01
In this paper, we present the magnetic properties of 2b·3CuCl2·2H2O (b = betaine, C5H11NO2). 2b·3CuCl2·2H2O is the first model substance for a two-dimensional S = 1/2 orthogonal antiferromagnetic trimer system. We have performed magnetic susceptibility, magnetization curve, and specific heat under extreme conditions: low temperatures and high magnetic fields in this system. The experimental results indicate that this substance is a magnetically S = 1/2 antiferromagnetic trimer system. The magnetization also shows one-third of the saturation value (MS ~ 3.2μB/f.u.) between 5 and 14T The specific heat in a zero field shows a sharp peak at 1.38K corresponding to a long-range magnetic ordering, TN. As the magnetic field increases, the TN shifts remarkably to a lower temperature and is suppressed. Above 5T, the specific heat has no anomaly down to 150mK In the plateau region with an energy gap, the magnetic ordering seems to be disappeared.
Search for the elusive magnetic state of hexagonal iron: The antiferromagnetic Fe71Ru29 hcp alloy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Petrillo, C.; Postorino, P.; Orecchini, A.; Sacchetti, F.
2018-03-01
The magnetic states of iron and their dependence on crystal structure represent an important case study for the physics of magnetism and its role in fundamental and applied science, including geophysical sciences. hcp iron is the most elusive structure as it exists only at high pressure but, at the same time, it is expected to be stable up to very high temperature. Exploring the magnetic state of pure Fe at high pressure is difficult and no conclusive results have been obtained. Simple binary alloys where the hexagonal phase of Fe is stabilized, offer a more controllable alternative to investigate iron magnetism. We carried out a neutron diffraction experiment on hcp Fe71Ru29 disordered alloy as a function of temperature. Fe in the hexagonal lattice of this specific alloy results to be antiferromagnetically aligned with a rather complex structure and a small magnetic moment. The temperature dependence suggests a Néel temperature TN = 124 ± 10 K, a value consistent with the low magnetic moment of 1.04 ± 0.10 μB obtained from the diffraction data that also suggest a non-commensurate magnetic structure with magnetic moments probably aligned along the c axis. The present data provide evidence for magnetic ordering in hcp Fe and support the theoretical description of magnetism of pure Fe at high pressure.
Exchange bias for core/shell magnetic nanoparticles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lemos, C. G. O.; Figueiredo, W.; Santos, M.
2015-09-01
We study the properties of a finite magnetic system to model a magnetic nanoparticle, which is formed by a reduced number of magnetic dipole moments due to the spin of the atoms. The nanoparticle is of the type core/shell where the shell is formed by spins interacting through an antiferromagnetic exchange coupling while for the spins belonging to the core the coupling is ferromagnetic. The interaction between the spins at the interface core/shell can be either ferro or antiferromagnetic. To describe the states of the spins we used the XY model in which the spins are considered as continuous variables, free to point in any direction of the xy plane. We also consider a magnetocrystalline anisotropy, exchange anisotropy and the Zeeman effect. Our model is studied in a lattice with square symmetry, using the Monte Carlo method along with the Metropolis prescription. The results show that in the absence of an external magnetic field and exchange anisotropy, the system continuously goes to a disordered state from an ordered state at a well defined temperature. In the presence of external magnetic fields the system displays the exchange bias phenomenon, that is, the displacement of the hysteresis loops, due to the introduction of the exchange anisotropy term. However, this displacement depends on the core and shell sizes, as well as on the magnitude of the coupling between the shell and the core moments.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mitsuda, Setsuo; Mase, Motoshi; Prokes, K.; Kitazawa, Hideaki; Katori, H.
2000-11-01
Neutron diffraction studies on a frustrated triangular lattice antiferromagnet (TLA) CuFeO2 have been performed under an applied magnetic field up to 14.5 T. The first-field-induced state was found to be not the commensurate 5-sublattice (↑↑↑↓↓) magnetic state but rather an incommensurate complex helical state reflecting the Heisenberg spin character of orbital singlet Fe3+ magnetic ions. In contrast, the second-field-induced state was found to be the 5-sublattice (↑↑↑↓↓) magnetic state predicted by the two-dimensional (2D) Ising spin TLA model with competing exchange interactions up to the 3rd neighbors.
Doped YbRh2Si2: not only ferromagnetic correlations but ferromagnetic order.
Lausberg, S; Hannaske, A; Steppke, A; Steinke, L; Gruner, T; Pedrero, L; Krellner, C; Klingner, C; Brando, M; Geibel, C; Steglich, F
2013-06-21
YbRh2Si2 is a prototypical system for studying unconventional antiferromagnetic quantum criticality. However, ferromagnetic correlations are present which can be enhanced via isoelectronic cobalt substitution for rhodium in Yb(Rh(1-x)Co(x))2Si2. So far, the magnetic order with increasing x was believed to remain antiferromagnetic. Here, we present the discovery of ferromagnetism for x = 0.27 below T(C) = 1.30 K in single crystalline samples. Unexpectedly, ordering occurs along the c axis, the hard crystalline electric field direction, where the g factor is an order of magnitude smaller than in the basal plane. Although the spontaneous magnetization is only 0.1 μB/Yb it corresponds to the full expected saturation moment along c taking into account partial Kondo screening.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gerbi, Andrea; Buzio, Renato; Kawale, Shrikant; Bellingeri, Emilio; Martinelli, Alberto; Bernini, Cristina; Tresca, Cesare; Capone, Massimo; Profeta, Gianni; Ferdeghini, Carlo
2017-12-01
We investigate with scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (STM/STS) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations the surface structures and the electronic properties of Fe1+y Te thin films grown by pulsed laser deposition. Contrary to the regular arrangement of antiferromagnetic nanostripes previously reported on cleaved single-crystal samples, the surface of Fe1+y Te thin films displays a peculiar distribution of spatially inhomogeneous nanostripes. Both STM and DFT calculations show the bias-dependent nature of such features and support the interpretation of spin-polarized tunneling between the FeTe surface and an unintentionally magnetized tip. In addition, the spatial inhomogeneity is interpreted as a purely electronic effect related to changes in hybridization and Fe-Fe bond length driven by local variations in the concentration of excess interstitial Fe cations. Unexpectedly, the surface density of states measured by STS strongly evolves with temperature in close proximity to the antiferromagnetic-paramagnetic first-order transition, and reveals a large pseudogap of 180-250 meV at about 50-65 K. We believe that in this temperature range a phase transition takes place, and the system orders and locks into particular combinations of orbitals and spins because of the interplay between excess interstitial magnetic Fe and strongly correlated d-electrons.
Li, Zi-An; Fontaíña-Troitiño, N.; Kovács, A.; Liébana-Viñas, S.; Spasova, M.; Dunin-Borkowski, R. E.; Müller, M.; Doennig, D.; Pentcheva, R.; Farle, M.; Salgueiriño, V.
2015-01-01
Polar oxide interfaces are an important focus of research due to their novel functionality which is not available in the bulk constituents. So far, research has focused mainly on heterointerfaces derived from the perovskite structure. It is important to extend our understanding of electronic reconstruction phenomena to a broader class of materials and structure types. Here we report from high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and quantitative magnetometry a robust – above room temperature (Curie temperature TC ≫ 300 K) – environmentally stable- ferromagnetically coupled interface layer between the antiferromagnetic rocksalt CoO core and a 2–4 nm thick antiferromagnetic spinel Co3O4 surface layer in octahedron-shaped nanocrystals. Density functional theory calculations with an on-site Coulomb repulsion parameter identify the origin of the experimentally observed ferromagnetic phase as a charge transfer process (partial reduction) of Co3+ to Co2+ at the CoO/Co3O4 interface, with Co2+ being in the low spin state, unlike the high spin state of its counterpart in CoO. This finding may serve as a guideline for designing new functional nanomagnets based on oxidation resistant antiferromagnetic transition metal oxides. PMID:25613569
Li, Zi-An; Fontaíña-Troitiño, N; Kovács, A; Liébana-Viñas, S; Spasova, M; Dunin-Borkowski, R E; Müller, M; Doennig, D; Pentcheva, R; Farle, M; Salgueiriño, V
2015-01-23
Polar oxide interfaces are an important focus of research due to their novel functionality which is not available in the bulk constituents. So far, research has focused mainly on heterointerfaces derived from the perovskite structure. It is important to extend our understanding of electronic reconstruction phenomena to a broader class of materials and structure types. Here we report from high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and quantitative magnetometry a robust – above room temperature (Curie temperature TC ≫ 300 K) – environmentally stable- ferromagnetically coupled interface layer between the antiferromagnetic rocksalt CoO core and a 2-4 nm thick antiferromagnetic spinel Co3O4 surface layer in octahedron-shaped nanocrystals. Density functional theory calculations with an on-site Coulomb repulsion parameter identify the origin of the experimentally observed ferromagnetic phase as a charge transfer process (partial reduction) of Co(3+) to Co(2+) at the CoO/Co3O4 interface, with Co(2+) being in the low spin state, unlike the high spin state of its counterpart in CoO. This finding may serve as a guideline for designing new functional nanomagnets based on oxidation resistant antiferromagnetic transition metal oxides.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fukazawa, Hideto; Ishiyama, Seiya; Goto, Masato; Kanamaru, Shuhei; Ohashi, Kohki; Kawamata, Takayuki; Adachi, Tadashi; Hirata, Michihiro; Sasaki, Takahiko; Koike, Yoji; Kohori, Yoh
2017-10-01
We performed 63,65Cu and 139La NMR measurements of T'-La1.8Eu0.2CuO4+δ (T'-LECO) with the Nd2CuO4-type structure (so-called T'-structure). As a result, we detected the 63,65Cu NMR signal under finite magnetic fields and found superconductivity without antiferromagnetic (AF) order only in the reduced T'-LECO, where excess apical oxygen atoms are properly removed. This indicates that the intrinsic ground state of the ideal T'-LECO is a paramagnetic and superconducting (SC) state. Below Tc, the Knight shift was found to rapidly decrease, which indicates the emergence of bulk superconductivity due to spin-singlet Cooper pairs in the reduced T'-LECO. In the SC state of the reduced T'-LECO, moreover, a characteristic temperature dependence of the spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T1 was observed, which implies the existence of nodal lines in the SC gap. These findings suggest that the superconductivity in the reduced T'-LECO probably has d-wave symmetry. In the normal state of the reduced T'-LECO, on the other hand, AF fluctuations were found to exist from the temperature dependence of 1/T1T, though no clear pseudogap behavior was observed. This suggests that the AF correlation plays a key role in the superconductivity of undoped high-Tc cuprate superconductors with the T'-structure.
Precessional switching of antiferromagnets by electric field induced Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya torque
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kim, T. H.; Grünberg, P.; Han, S. H.; Cho, B. K.
2018-05-01
Antiferromagnetic insulators (AFIs) have attracted much interest from many researchers as promising candidates for use in ultrafast, ultralow-dissipation spintronic devices. As a fast method of reversing magnetization, precessional switching is realized when antiferromagnetic Néel orders l =(s1+s2 )/2 surmount the magnetic anisotropy or potential barrier in a given magnetic system, which is described well by the antiferromagnetic plane pendulum (APP) model. Here, we report that, as an alternative switching scenario, the direct coupling of an electric field with Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya (DM) interaction, which stems from spin-orbit coupling, is exploited for optimal switching. We derive the pendulum equation of motion of antiferromagnets, where DM torque is induced by a pulsed electric field. The temporal DM interaction is found to not only be in the form of magnetic torques (e.g., spin-orbit torque or magnetic field) but also modifies the magnetic potential that limits l 's activity; as a result, appropriate controls (e.g., direction, magnitude, and pulse shape) of the induced DM vector realize deterministic reversal in APP. The results present an approach for the control of a magnetic storage device by means of an electric field.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hong, Ie-Hong; Hsu, Hsin-Zan
2018-03-01
The layered antiferromagnetism of parallel nanowire (NW) arrays self-assembled on Si(110) have been observed at room temperature by direct imaging of both the topographies and magnetic domains using spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy (SP-STM/STS). The topographic STM images reveal that the self-assembled unidirectional and parallel NiSi NWs grow into the Si(110) substrate along the [\\bar{1}10] direction (i.e. the endotaxial growth) and exhibit multiple-layer growth. The spatially-resolved SP-STS maps show that these parallel NiSi NWs of different heights produce two opposite magnetic domains, depending on the heights of either even or odd layers in the layer stack of the NiSi NWs. This layer-wise antiferromagnetic structure can be attributed to an antiferromagnetic interlayer exchange coupling between the adjacent layers in the multiple-layer NiSi NW with a B2 (CsCl-type) crystal structure. Such an endotaxial heterostructure of parallel magnetic NiSi NW arrays with a layered antiferromagnetic ordering in Si(110) provides a new and important perspective for the development of novel Si-based spintronic nanodevices.
Strong Orientation-Dependent Spin-Orbit Torque in Thin Films of the Antiferromagnet Mn2Au
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zhou, X. F.; Zhang, J.; Li, F.; Chen, X. Z.; Shi, G. Y.; Tan, Y. Z.; Gu, Y. D.; Saleem, M. S.; Wu, H. Q.; Pan, F.; Song, C.
2018-05-01
Antiferromagnets with zero net magnetic moment, strong anti-interference, and ultrafast switching speed are potentially competitive in high-density information storage. The body-centered tetragonal antiferromagnet Mn2Au with opposite-spin sublattices is a unique metallic material for Néel-order spin-orbit-torque (SOT) switching. We investigate the SOT switching in quasiepitaxial (103), (101) and (204) Mn2Au films prepared by a simple magnetron sputtering method. We demonstrate current-induced antiferromagnetic moment switching in all of the prepared Mn2Au films by using a short current pulse at room temperature, whereas differently oriented films exhibit distinguished switching characters. A direction-independent reversible switching is attained in Mn2Au (103) films due to negligible magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy, while for Mn2Au (101) and (204) films, the switching is invertible with the current applied along the in-plane easy axis and its vertical axis, but it becomes attenuated seriously during initial switching circles when the current is applied along the hard axis because of the existence of magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy. Besides the fundamental significance, the strong orientation-dependent SOT switching, which is not realized, irrespective of ferromagnet and antiferromagnet, provides versatility for spintronics.
Non-quasiparticle states in a half-metallic ferromagnet with antiferromagnetic s-d(f) interaction.
Irkhin, V Yu
2015-04-22
Non-quasiparticle (incoherent) states which play an important role in the electronic structure of half-metallic ferromagnets (HMF) are investigated consistently in the case of antiferromagnetic s-d(f) exchange interaction. Their appropriate description in the limit of strong correlations requires a rearrangement of perturbation series in comparison with the usual Dyson equation. This consideration provides a solution of the Kondo problem in the HMF case and can be important for first-principle HMF calculations performed earlier for ferromagnetic s-d(f) interaction.
H-T Magnetic Phase Diagram of a Frustrated Triangular Lattice Antiferromagnet CuFeO 2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mitsuda, Setsuo; Mase, Motoshi; Uno, Takahiro; Kitazawa, Hideaki; Katori, Hiroko
2000-01-01
By magnetization and specific heat measurements in an applied magnetic field up to 12 T, we obtained the magnetic field (H) versus temperature (T) phase diagram of a frustrated triangular lattice antiferromagnet (TLA), CuFeO2, where a partially disordered phase typical to Ising TLA exists as a thermally induced state for the 4-sublattice ground state as well as for the first-field-induced 5-sublattice-like state. The experimentally obtained H-T magnetic phase diagram is compared with that from Monte-Carlo simulation of a 2D Ising TLA model with competing exchange interactions up to 3rd neighbors.
Structure and property correlations in FeS
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kuhn, S. J.; Kidder, M. K.; Parker, D. S.; dela Cruz, C.; McGuire, M. A.; Chance, W. M.; Li, Li; Debeer-Schmitt, L.; Ermentrout, J.; Littrell, K. C.; Eskildsen, M. R.; Sefat, A. S.
2017-03-01
For iron-sulfide (FeS), we investigate the correlation between the structural details, including its dimensionality and composition, with its magnetic and superconducting properties. We compare, theoretically and experimentally, the two-dimensional (2D) layered tetragonal (;t-FeS;) phase with the 3D hexagonal ("h-FeS") phase. X-ray diffraction reveals iron-deficient chemical compositions of t-Fe0.93(1)S and h-Fe0.84(1)S that show no low-temperature structural transitions. First-principles calculations reveal a high sensitivity of the 2D structure to the electronic and magnetic properties, predicting marginal antiferromagnetic instability for our compound (sulfur height of zS = 0.252) with an ordering energy of about 11 meV/Fe, while the 3D phase is magnetically stable. Experimentally, h-Fe0.84S orders magnetically well above room temperature, while t-Fe0.93S shows coexistence of antiferromagnetism at TN = 116 and filamentary superconductivity below Tc = 4 K. Low temperature neutron diffraction data reveals antiferromagnetic commensurate ordering with wave vector km = (0.25,0.25,0) and 0.46(2) μB/Fe. Additionally, neutron scattering measurements were used to find the particle size and iron vacancy arrangement of t-FeS and h-FeS. The structure of iron sulfide has a delicate relationship with the superconducting transition; while our sample with a = 3.6772(7) Å is a filamentary superconductor coexisting with an antiferromagnetic phase, previously reported samples with a > 3.68 Å are bulk superconductors with no magnetism, and those with a ≈ 3.674 Å show magnetic properties.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huang, Li-Yuan; Fang, Mao-Fa
2008-07-01
The thermal entanglement and teleportation of a thermally mixed entangled state of a two-qubit Heisenberg XXX chain under the Dzyaloshinski-Moriya (DM) anisotropic antisymmetric interaction through a noisy quantum channel given by a Werner state is investigated. The dependences of the thermal entanglement of the teleported state on the DM coupling constant, the temperature and the entanglement of the noisy quantum channel are studied in detail for both the ferromagnetic and the antiferromagnetic cases. The result shows that a minimum entanglement of the noisy quantum channel must be provided in order to realize the entanglement teleportation. The values of fidelity of the teleported state are also studied for these two cases. It is found that under certain conditions, we can transfer an initial state with a better fidelity than that for any classical communication protocol.
Controlling the switching field in nanomagnets by means of domain-engineered antiferromagnets
Folven, Eric; Linder, J.; Gomonay, O. V.; ...
2015-09-14
Using soft x-ray spectromicroscopy, we investigate the magnetic domain structure in embedded nanomagnets defined in La 0.7Sr 0.3MnO 3 thin films and LaFeO 3/La 0.7Sr 0.3MnO 3 bilayers. We find that shape-controlled antiferromagnetic domain states give rise to a significant reduction of the switching field of the rectangular nanomagnets. This is discussed within the framework of competition between an intrinsic spin-flop coupling and shape anisotropy. In conclusion, the data demonstrates that shape effects in antiferromagnets may be used to control the magnetic properties in nanomagnets.
Controlling the switching field in nanomagnets by means of domain-engineered antiferromagnets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Folven, E.; Linder, J.; Gomonay, O. V.; Scholl, A.; Doran, A.; Young, A. T.; Retterer, S. T.; Malik, V. K.; Tybell, T.; Takamura, Y.; Grepstad, J. K.
2015-09-01
Using soft x-ray spectromicroscopy, we investigate the magnetic domain structure in embedded nanomagnets defined in L a0.7S r0.3Mn O3 thin films and LaFe O3/L a0.7S r0.3Mn O3 bilayers. We find that shape-controlled antiferromagnetic domain states give rise to a significant reduction of the switching field of the rectangular nanomagnets. This is discussed within the framework of competition between an intrinsic spin-flop coupling and shape anisotropy. The data demonstrates that shape effects in antiferromagnets may be used to control the magnetic properties in nanomagnets.
Switching Magnetism and Superconductivity with Spin-Polarized Current in Iron-Based Superconductor.
Choi, Seokhwan; Choi, Hyoung Joon; Ok, Jong Mok; Lee, Yeonghoon; Jang, Won-Jun; Lee, Alex Taekyung; Kuk, Young; Lee, SungBin; Heinrich, Andreas J; Cheong, Sang-Wook; Bang, Yunkyu; Johnston, Steven; Kim, Jun Sung; Lee, Jhinhwan
2017-12-01
We explore a new mechanism for switching magnetism and superconductivity in a magnetically frustrated iron-based superconductor using spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy (SPSTM). Our SPSTM study on single-crystal Sr_{2}VO_{3}FeAs shows that a spin-polarized tunneling current can switch the Fe-layer magnetism into a nontrivial C_{4} (2×2) order, which cannot be achieved by thermal excitation with an unpolarized current. Our tunneling spectroscopy study shows that the induced C_{4} (2×2) order has characteristics of plaquette antiferromagnetic order in the Fe layer and strongly suppresses superconductivity. Also, thermal agitation beyond the bulk Fe spin ordering temperature erases the C_{4} state. These results suggest a new possibility of switching local superconductivity by changing the symmetry of magnetic order with spin-polarized and unpolarized tunneling currents in iron-based superconductors.
Switching Magnetism and Superconductivity with Spin-Polarized Current in Iron-Based Superconductor
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Choi, Seokhwan; Choi, Hyoung Joon; Ok, Jong Mok; Lee, Yeonghoon; Jang, Won-Jun; Lee, Alex Taekyung; Kuk, Young; Lee, SungBin; Heinrich, Andreas J.; Cheong, Sang-Wook; Bang, Yunkyu; Johnston, Steven; Kim, Jun Sung; Lee, Jhinhwan
2017-12-01
We explore a new mechanism for switching magnetism and superconductivity in a magnetically frustrated iron-based superconductor using spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy (SPSTM). Our SPSTM study on single-crystal Sr2VO3FeAs shows that a spin-polarized tunneling current can switch the Fe-layer magnetism into a nontrivial C4 (2 ×2 ) order, which cannot be achieved by thermal excitation with an unpolarized current. Our tunneling spectroscopy study shows that the induced C4 (2 ×2 ) order has characteristics of plaquette antiferromagnetic order in the Fe layer and strongly suppresses superconductivity. Also, thermal agitation beyond the bulk Fe spin ordering temperature erases the C4 state. These results suggest a new possibility of switching local superconductivity by changing the symmetry of magnetic order with spin-polarized and unpolarized tunneling currents in iron-based superconductors.
Spin caloric effects in antiferromagnets assisted by an external spin current
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gomonay, O.; Yamamoto, Kei; Sinova, Jairo
2018-07-01
Searching for novel spin caloric effects in antiferromagnets, we study the properties of thermally activated magnons in the presence of an external spin current and temperature gradient. We predict the spin Peltier effect—generation of a heat flux by spin accumulation—in an antiferromagnetic insulator with cubic or uniaxial magnetic symmetry. This effect is related to the spin-current induced splitting of the relaxation times of the magnons with the opposite spin direction. We show that the Peltier effect can trigger antiferromagnetic domain wall motion with a force whose value grows with the temperature of a sample. At a temperature larger than the energy of the low-frequency magnons, this force is much larger than the force caused by direct spin transfer between the spin current and the domain wall. We also demonstrate that the external spin current can induce the magnon spin Seebeck effect. The corresponding Seebeck coefficient is controlled by the current density. These spin-current assisted caloric effects open new ways for the manipulation of the magnetic states in antiferromagnets.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Doi, Yoshihiro, E-mail: doi@sci.hokudai.ac.jp; Satou, Tatsuya; Hinatsu, Yukio
2013-10-15
The synthesis, crystal structures and magnetic properties of LnM(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} (Ln=Y, Ho–Lu; M=Sc, Cr) were investigated. The LnCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} compounds crystallize in the dolomite-type structure with space group R3{sup ¯}, in which the Ln and Cr ions occupy two octahedral sites. From the result of structural analysis, it was found that there is an anti-site disorder between these two sites and its chemical formula is more exactly Ln{sub 1−r}Cr{sub r}[Cr{sub 1−r}Ln{sub r}](BO{sub 3}){sub 2}. On the other hand, the LnSc(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} adopt the calcite-type structure with space group R3{sup ¯}c. The Ln and Sc ions randomly occupymore » an octahedral site and the chemical formula is represented as (Ln{sub 0.5}Sc{sub 0.5})BO{sub 3}. From the magnetic susceptibility and specific heat measurements, we found that all the LnCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} show an antiferromagnetic transition at 6.1–8.1 K. This transition is mainly due to the ordering of Cr{sup 3+} magnetic moments. Among the compounds with magnetic Ln{sup 3+} ions, only YbCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} shows an antiferromagnetic ordering of Ln{sup 3+} ion at 2.1 K. - Graphical abstract: The lanthanide containing borates LnM(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} (Ln=Y, Ho–Lu; M=Sc, Cr) have the dolomite-type (Ln=Cr) and calcite-type (Ln=Sc) structures. Both structures are similar to each other except for the difference in the partially or fully disordered arrangements of octahedral sites. At low temperatures, the LnCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} compounds show an antiferromagnetic transition due to a long-range ordering of Cr{sup 3+} moments. Among them only YbCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} shows an antiferromagnetic ordering of Ln{sup 3+} ion at 2.1 K. Display Omitted - Highlights: • Lanthanide containing borates LnM(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} (Ln=Y, Ho–Lu; M=Sc, Cr) have been synthesized. • LnCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} has the dolomite-type structure with an anti-site disorder between Ln and Cr sites. • LnSc(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} has the calcite-type structure in which the Ln and Cr randomly occupy the same site. • LnCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} shows an antiferromagnetic transition at 6.1–8.1 K due to the long-range magnetic ordering of Cr{sup 3+} moments. • Only YbCr(BO{sub 3}){sub 2} shows the two-step antiferromagnetic ordering: Cr{sup 3+} (6.1 K) and Yb{sup 3+} (2.1 K)« less
Spin-one bilinear-biquadratic model on a star lattice
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, Hyun-Yong; Kawashima, Naoki
2018-05-01
We study the ground-state phase diagram of the S =1 bilinear-biquadratic model (BLBQ) on the star lattice with the state-of-art tensor network algorithms. The system has four phases: the ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, ferroquadrupolar, and spin-liquid phases. The phases and their phase boundaries are determined by examining various local observables, correlation functions, and transfer matrices exhaustively. The spin-liquid phase, which is the first quantum disordered phase found in the two-dimensional BLBQ model, is gapped and devoid of any conventional long-range order. It is also characterized by fixed-parity virtual bonds in the tensor network formalism, analogous to the Haldane phase, while the parity varies depending on the location of the bond.
Electric Field Controlled Magnetism in BiFeO3/Ferromagnet Films
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Holcomb, M. B.; Chu, Y. H.; Martin, L. W.; Gajek, M.; Seidel, J.; Ramesh, R.; Scholl, A.; Fraile-Rodriguez, A.
2008-03-01
Electric field control of magnetism is a hot technological topic at the moment due to its potential to revolutionize today's devices. Magnetoelectric materials, those having both electric and magnetic order and the potential for coupling between the two, are a promising avenue to approach electric control. BiFeO3, both a ferroelectric and an antiferromagnet, is the only single phase room temperature magnetoelectric that is currently known. In addition to other possibilities, its multiferroic nature has potential in the very active field of exchange bias, where an antiferromagnetic thin film pins the magnetic direction of an adjoining ferromagnetic layer. Since this antiferromagnet is electrically tunable, this coupling could allow electric-field control of the ferromagnetic magnetization. Direction determination of antiferromagnetic domains in BFO has recently been shown using linear and circular dichroism studies. Recently, this technique has been extended to look at the magnetic domains of a ferromagnetic grown on top of BFO. The clear magnetic changes induced by application of electric fields reveal the possibility of electric control.