93 research outputs found
Growth and Characterization of Ce- Substituted Nd2Fe14B Single Crystals
Single crystals of (Nd1-xCex)2Fe14B are grown out of Fe-(Nd,Ce) flux.
Chemical and structural analysis of the crystals indicates that
(Nd1-xCex)2Fe14B forms a solid solution until at least x = 0.38 with a
Vegard-like variation of the lattice constants with x. Refinements of single
crystal neutron diffraction data indicate that Ce has a slight site preference
(7:3) for the 4g rare earth site over the 4f site. Magnetization measurements
show that for x = 0.38 the saturation magnetization at 400 K, a temperature
important to applications, falls from 29.8 for the parent Nd2Fe14B to 27.6
(mu)B/f.u., the anisotropy field decreases from 5.5 T to 4.7 T, and the Curie
temperature decreases from 586 to 543 K. First principles calculations carried
out within density functional theory are used to explain the decrease in
magnetic properties due to Ce substitution. Though the presence of the
lower-cost and more abundant Ce slightly affects these important magnetic
characteristics, this decrease is not large enough to affect a multitude of
applications. Ce-substituted Nd2Fe14B is therefore a potential high-performance
permanent magnet material with substantially reduced Nd content.Comment: 11 Pages, 8 figures, 5 table
Magnetic Frustration Driven by Itinerancy in Spinel CoV2O4
Localized spins and itinerant electrons rarely coexist in geometrically-frustrated spinel lattices. They exhibit a complex interplay between localized spins and itinerant electrons. In this paper, we study the origin of the unusual spin structure of the spinel CoV2O4, which stands at the crossover from insulating to itinerant behavior using the first principle calculation and neutron diffraction measurement. In contrast to the expected paramagnetism, localized spins supported by enhanced exchange couplings are frustrated by the effects of delocalized electrons. This frustration produces a non-collinear spin state even without orbital orderings and may be responsible for macroscopic spin-glass behavior. Competing phases can be uncovered by external perturbations such as pressure or magnetic field, which enhances the frustration
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Glass-Like Heat Conduction in Crystalline Semiconductors
The thermal conductivity and structural properties of polycrystalline and single crystal semiconductor type-1 germanium clathrates are reported. Germanium clathrates exhibit thermal conductivities that are typical of amorphous materials. This behavior occurs in spite of their well-defined crystalline structure. The authors employ temperature dependent neutron diffraction data in investigating the displacements of the caged strontium atoms in Sr{sub 8}Ga{sub 16}Ge{sub 30} and their interaction with the polyhedral cages that entrap them. Their aim is to investigate the correlation between the structural properties and the low, glass-like thermal conductivity observed in this compound
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