1,196 research outputs found

    Spin and exchange coupling for Ti embedded in a surface dipolar network

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    We have studied the spin and exchange coupling of Ti atoms on a Cu2_2N/Cu(100) surface using density functional theory. We find that individual Ti have a spin of 1.0 (i.e., 2 Bohr Magneton) on the Cu2_2N/Cu(100) surface instead of spin-1/2 as found by Scanning Tunneling Microscope. We suggest an explanation for this difference, a two-stage Kondo effect, which can be verified by experiments. By calculating the exchange coupling for Ti dimers on the Cu2_2N/Cu(100) surface, we find that the exchange coupling across a `void' of 3.6\AA\ is antiferromagnetic, whereas indirect (superexchange) coupling through a N atom is ferromagnetic. We confirm the existence of superexchange interactions by varying the Ti-N angle in a model trimer calculation. For a square lattice of Ti on Cu2_2N/Cu(100), we find a novel spin striped phase

    Magnetic ground state and 2D behavior in pseudo-Kagome layered system Cu3Bi(SeO3)2O2Br

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    Anisotropic magnetic properties of a layered kagome-like system Cu3Bi(SeO3)2O2Br have been studied by bulk magnetization and magnetic susceptibility measurements as well as powder and single-crystal neutron diffraction. At T_N = 27.4 K the system develops an alternating antiferromagnetic order of (ab) layers, which individually exhibit canted ferrimagnetic moment arrangement, resulting from the competing ferro- and antiferro-magnetic intralayer exchange interactions. A magnetic field B_C ~ 0.8 T applied along the c axis (perpendicular to the layers) triggers a metamagnetic transition, when every second layer flips, i.e., resulting in a ferrimagnetic structure. Significantly higher fields are required to rotate the ferromagnetic component towards the b axis (~7 T) or towards the a axis (~15 T). The estimates of the exchange coupling constants and features indicative of an XY character of this quasi-2D system are presented.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, final versio

    Many-spin effects in inelastic neutron scattering and electron paramagnetic resonance of molecular nanomagnets

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    Many molecular magnetic clusters, such as single-molecule magnets, are characterized by spin ground states with defined total spin S exhibiting zero-field-splittings. In this work, the spectroscopic intensities of the transitions within the ground-state multiplet are analyzed. In particular, the effects of a mixing with higher-lying spin multiplets, which is produced by anisotropic interactions and is neglected in the standard single-spin description, are investigated systematically for the two experimental techniques of inelastic neutron scattering (INS) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), with emphasis on the former technique. The spectroscopic transition intensities are calculated analytically by constructing corresponding effective spin operators perturbationally up to second order and consequently using irreducible tensor operator techniques. Three main effects of spin mixing are observed. Firstly, a pronounced dependence of the INS intensities on the momentum transfer Q, with a typical oscillatory behavior, emerges in first order, signaling the many-spin nature of the wave functions in exchange-coupled clusters. Secondly, as compared to the results of a first-order calculation, the intensities of the transitions within the spin multiplet are affected differently by spin mixing. This allows one, thirdly, to differentiate the higher-order contributions to the cluster magnetic anisotropy which come from the single-ion ligand-field terms and spin mixing, respectively. The analytical results are illustrated by means of the three examples of an antiferromagnetic heteronuclear dimer, the Mn-[3 x 3] grid molecule, and the single-molecule magnet Mn12.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, REVTEX4, to appear in PR

    Spin anisotropy effects in dimer single molecule magnets

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    We present a model of equal spin s1s_1 dimer single molecule magnets. The spins within each dimer interact via the Heisenberg and the most general set of four quadratic anisotropic spin interactions with respective strengths JJ and {Jj}\{J_j\}, and with the magnetic induction B{\bf B}. We solve the model exactly for s1=1/2,1,5/2s_1=1/2, 1, 5/2, and for antiferromagnetic Heisenberg couplings (J<0J<0), present M(B){\bf M}({\bf B}) curves at low TT for these cases. Low-TT CV(B)C_V({\bf B}) curves for s1=1/2s_1=1/2 and electron paramagnetic susceptibility χ(B,ω)\chi({\bf B},\omega) for s1=1s_1=1 are also provided. For weak anisotropy interactions, we employ a perturbative treatment, and show that the Hartree and extended Hartree approximations lead to reliable analytic results at low TT and large BB for these quantities and for the inelastic neutron scattering cross-section S(B,q,ω)S({\bf B}, {\bf q},\omega). Our results are discussed with regard to existing M(B){\bf M}({\bf B}) experiments on s1=5/2s_1=5/2 Fe2_2 dimer single molecule magnets, and suggest that one of them contains a substantial amount of single-ion anisotropy, without any sizeable global spin anisotropy. We urge further experiments of the above types on single crystals of Fe2_2 and on some s=9/2s_=9/2 [Mn4_4]2_2 dimers, in order to elucidate the precise values of the various microscopic interactions.Comment: 30 pages, 25 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Direct Observation of Quantum Coherence in Single-Molecule Magnets

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    Direct evidence of quantum coherence in a single-molecule magnet in frozen solution is reported with coherence times as long as T2 = 630 ns. We can strongly increase the coherence time by modifying the matrix in which the single-molecule magnets are embedded. The electron spins are coupled to the proton nuclear spins of both the molecule itself and interestingly, also to those of the solvent. The clear observation of Rabi oscillations indicates that we can manipulate the spin coherently, an essential prerequisite for performing quantum computations.Comment: 5 Pages, 4 Figures, final version published in PR

    Mandible reconstruction with iliac crest graft and implant assisted prosthesis after resection of mandibular myxoma

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    La reconstrucción de los maxilares luego de las resecciones por tumores odontogénicos agresivos sigue siendo un tema de debate entre los cirujanos bucomaxilofaciales, en cuanto a la técnica a emplear y los momentos oportunos para implementarla. En nuestra experiencia, ante la presencia de tumores odontogénicos agresivos, la resección con margen de seguridad es mandataria, y de ser posible la reconstrucción inmediata con injerto de cresta ilíaca para una posterior rehabilitación oral implanto-asistida. En el presente trabajo reportamos un casos clínico de una paciente con un mixoma mandibular resecado y reconstruido en forma inmediata con injerto de cresta ilíaca y su posterior rehabilitación protética implanto asistida.Mandible reconstruction after resection due to aggressive odontogenic tumors continues to be a subject of discussion among buco-maxillofacial surgeons, especially regarding the technique used and the appropriate time to implement it. In our experience, in the presence of aggressive odontogenic tumors, resection with safety margins is compulsory, if possible, accompanied by the immediate reconstruction with iliac crest graft for subsequent implantassisted oral rehab. A case report of a patient with resected mandibular myxoma immediately reconstructed with iliac crest graft and implant-assisted prosthetic rehab is described in this paper.Facultad de Odontologí

    Spin electric effects in molecular antiferromagnets

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    Molecular nanomagnets show clear signatures of coherent behavior and have a wide variety of effective low-energy spin Hamiltonians suitable for encoding qubits and implementing spin-based quantum information processing. At the nanoscale, the preferred mechanism for control of quantum systems is through application of electric fields, which are strong, can be locally applied, and rapidly switched. In this work, we provide the theoretical tools for the search for single molecule magnets suitable for electric control. By group-theoretical symmetry analysis we find that the spin-electric coupling in triangular molecules is governed by the modification of the exchange interaction, and is possible even in the absence of spin-orbit coupling. In pentagonal molecules the spin-electric coupling can exist only in the presence of spin-orbit interaction. This kind of coupling is allowed for both s=1/2s=1/2 and s=3/2s=3/2 spins at the magnetic centers. Within the Hubbard model, we find a relation between the spin-electric coupling and the properties of the chemical bonds in a molecule, suggesting that the best candidates for strong spin-electric coupling are molecules with nearly degenerate bond orbitals. We also investigate the possible experimental signatures of spin-electric coupling in nuclear magnetic resonance and electron spin resonance spectroscopy, as well as in the thermodynamic measurements of magnetization, electric polarization, and specific heat of the molecules.Comment: 31 pages, 24 figure

    Pressure Dependence of the Magnetic Anisotropy in the "Single-Molecule Magnet" [Mn4O3Br(OAc)3(dbm)3]

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    The anisotropy splitting in the ground state of the single-molecule magnet [Mn4O3Br(OAc)3(dbm)3] is studied by inelastic neutron scattering as a function of hydrostatic pressure. This allows a tuning of the anisotropy and thus the energy barrier for slow magnetisation relaxation at low temperatures. The value of the negative axial anisotropy parameter DclusterD_{\rm cluster} changes from -0.0627(1) meV at ambient to -0.0603(3) meV at 12 kbar pressure, and in the same pressure range the height of the energy barrier between up and down spins is reduced from 1.260(5) meV to 1.213(9) meV. Since the MnBr\rm Mn-Br bond is significantly softer and thus more compressible than the MnO\rm Mn-O bonds, pressure induces a tilt of the single ion Mn3+^{3+} anisotropy axes, resulting in the net reduction of the axial cluster anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Bounding and approximating parabolas for the spectrum of Heisenberg spin systems

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    We prove that for a wide class of quantum spin systems with isotropic Heisenberg coupling the energy eigenvalues which belong to a total spin quantum number S have upper and lower bounds depending at most quadratically on S. The only assumption adopted is that the mean coupling strength of any spin w.r.t. its neighbours is constant for all N spins. The coefficients of the bounding parabolas are given in terms of special eigenvalues of the N times N coupling matrix which are usually easily evaluated. In addition we show that the bounding parabolas, if properly shifted, provide very good approximations of the true boundaries of the spectrum. We present numerical examples of frustrated rings, a cube, and an icosahedron.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Europhysics Letter

    Spin-Triplet Excitons in the S=1/2S=1/2 Gapped Antiferromagnet BaCuSi2_2O6_6: Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Studies

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    BaCuSi2_2O6_6, a S=1/2S=1/2 quantum antiferromagnet with a double-layer structure of Cu2+^{2+} ions in a distorted planar-rectangular coordination and with a dimerized spin singlet ground state, is studied by means of the electron paramagnetic resonance technique. It is argued that multiple absorptions observed at low temperatures are intimately related to a thermally-activated spin-triplet exciton superstructure. Analysis of the angular dependence of exciton modes in BaCuSi2_2O6_6 allows us to accurately estimate anisotropy parameters. In addition, the temperature dependence of EPR intensity and linewidth is discussed.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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