698 research outputs found
Do neutrons publish? A neutron publication survey 2005-2015
Publication in scientific journals is the main product of scientific
research. The amount of papers published, their placement in high impact
journals, and their citations are used as a measure of the productivity of
individual scientists, institutes or fields of science. To give a profound
basis on the publication record and the quality of the publication efforts in
neutron scattering, a survey has been done following the approach to use
bibliographic databases. Questions to be addressed by this survey are: Is the
productivity of research with neutrons changing over the years? Which is the
geographic distribution in this field of research? Which ones are leading
facilities? Is the quality of publications changing? The main results found are
presented
Inelastic neutron scattering study of crystal field excitations of Nd<sup>3+</sup> in NdFeAsO
Inelastic neutron scattering experiments were performed to investigate the
crystalline electric field (CEF) excitations of Nd3+ (J = 9/2) in the iron
pnictide NdFeAsO. The crystal field level structures for both the
high-temperature paramagnetic phase and the low-temperature antiferromagnetic
phase of NdFeAsO are constructed. The variation of CEF excitations of Nd3+
reflects not only the change of local symmetry but also the change of magnetic
ordered state of the Fe sublattice. By analyzing the crystal field interaction
with a crystal field Hamiltonian, the crystal field parameters are obtained. It
was found that the sign of the fourth and sixth-order crystal field parameters
change upon the magnetic phase transition at 140 K, which may be due to the
variation of exchange interactions between the 4f and conduction electrons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Magnetization distribution and orbital moment in the non-Superconducting Chalcogenide Compound K0.8Fe1.6Se2
We have used polarized and unpolarized neutron diffraction to determine the
spatial distribution of the magnetization density induced by a magnetic field
of 9 T in the tetragonal phase of K0.8Fe1.6Se2. The maximum entropy
reconstruction shows clearly that most of the magnetization is confined to the
region around the iron atoms whereas there is no significant magnetization
associated with either Se or K atoms. The distribution of magnetization around
the Fe atom is slightly nonspherical with a shape which is extended along the
[0 0 1] direction in the projection. Multipolar refinement results show that
the electrons which give rise to the paramagnetic susceptibility are confined
to the Fe atoms and their distribution suggests that they occupy 3d t2g-type
orbitals with around 66% in those of xz/yz symmetry. Detail modeling of the
magnetic form factor indicates the presence of an orbital moment to the total
paramagnetic moment of Fe2+Comment: 7 pages, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Magnetic structure of the Eu2+ moments in superconducting EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 with x = 0.19
The magnetic structure of the Eu2+ moments in the superconducting
EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 sample with x = 0.19 has been determined using neutron
scattering. We conclude that the Eu2+ moments are aligned along the c direction
below T_C = 19.0(1) K with an ordered moment of 6.6(2) mu_B in the
superconducting state. An impurity phase similar to the underdoped phase exists
within the bulk sample which orders antiferromagnetically below T_N = 17.0(2)
K. We found no indication of iron magnetic order, nor any incommensurate
magnetic order of the Eu2+ moments in the sample.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B (regular article
Magnetisation distribution in the tetragonal phase of BaFe2As2
We have determined the spatial distribution of the magnetisation induced by a
field of 9 T in the tetragonal phase of BaFe2As2 using polarised neutron
diffraction. Magnetic structure factors derived from the polarisation
dependence of the intensities of Bragg reflections were used to make a maximum
entropy reconstruction of the distribution projected on the 110 plane. The
reconstruction shows clearly that the magnetisation is confined to the region
around the iron atoms and that there is no significant magnetisation associated
with either the As or Ba atoms. The distribution of magnetisation around the Fe
atom is significantly non-spherical with a shape which is extended in the
directions in the projection. These results show that the electrons which give
rise to the paramagnetic susceptibility are confined to the Fe atoms their
distribution suggests that they occupy 3d t_2g type orbitals with about 60% in
those of xy symmetry
Magnetic properties and spin structure of MnO single crystal and powder
Zero field cooled (ZFC)/Field Cooled (FC) magnetization curves of a bulk MnO
single crystal show a peculiar peak at low temperatures (~40K) similar to the
low temperature peak observed in MnO nanoparticles. In order to investigate the
origin of this peak, the spin structure of a MnO single crystal has been
studied and compared with a single phase powder sample using magnetometry and
polarized neutron scattering. Both magnetometry and polarized neutron
diffraction results confirm the antiferromagnetic (AF) phase transition at the
N\'eel temperature T_N of 118K, in both powder and single crystal form.
However, the low temperature peak in the ZFC/FC magnetization curves is not
observed in single phase MnO powder. To better understand the observed
behavior, ac susceptibility measurements have been employed. We conclude that
the clear peak in the magnetic signal from the single crystal originates from a
small amount of ferrimagnetic (FiM) Mn2O3 or Mn3O4 impurities, which is grown
at the interfaces between MnO crystal twins
Magnetic and structural transitions in LaNaFeAs single crystals
LaNaFeAs single crystals have been grown out of an
NaAs flux in an alumina crucible and characterized by measuring magnetic
susceptibility, electrical resistivity, specific heat, as well as single
crystal x-ray and neutron diffraction. LaNaFeAs single
crystals show a structural phase transition from a high temperature tetragonal
phase to a low-temperature orthorhombic phase at T\,=\,125\,K. This
structural transition is accompanied by an anomaly in the temperature
dependence of electrical resistivity, anisotropic magnetic susceptibility, and
specific heat. Concomitant with the structural phase transition, the Fe moments
order along the \emph{a} direction with an ordered moment of
0.7(1)\, at \emph{T}\,=\,5 K. The low temperature stripe
antiferromagnetic structure is the same as that in other
\emph{A}FeAs (\emph{A}\,=\,Ca, Sr, Ba) compounds.
LaNaFeAs provides a new material platform for the
study of iron-based superconductors where the electron-hole asymmetry could be
studied by simply varying La/Na ratio.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Phase diagram of Eu magnetic ordering in Sn-flux-grown Eu(FeCo)As single crystals
The magnetic ground state of the Eu moments in a series of
Eu(FeCo)As single crystals grown from the Sn flux has
been investigated in detail by neutron diffraction measurements. Combined with
the results from the macroscopic properties (resistivity, magnetic
susceptibility and specific heat) measurements, a phase diagram describing how
the Eu magnetic order evolves with Co doping in
Eu(FeCo)As is established. The ground-state magnetic
structure of the Eu spins is found to develop from the A-type
antiferromagnetic (AFM) order in the parent compound, via the A-type canted AFM
structure with some net ferromagnetic (FM) moment component along the
crystallographic direction at intermediate Co doping levels,
finally to the pure FM order at relatively high Co doping levels. The ordering
temperature of Eu declines linearly at first, reaches the minimum value of
16.5(2) K around = 0.100(4), and then reverses upwards with
further Co doping. The doping-induced modification of the indirect
Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida (RKKY) interaction between the Eu moments,
which is mediated by the conduction electrons on the (Fe,Co)As
layers, as well as the change of the strength of the direct interaction between
the Eu and Fe moments, might be responsible for the change of the
magnetic ground state and the ordering temperature of the Eu sublattice. In
addition, for Eu(FeCo)As single crystals with 0.10
0.18, strong ferromagnetism from the Eu
sublattice is well developed in the superconducting state, where a spontaneous
vortex state is expected to account for the compromise between the two
competing phenomena.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Non-collinear magnetic structure and anisotropic magnetoelastic coupling in cobalt pyrovanadate Co2V2O7
The Co2V2O7 is recently reported to exhibit amazing magnetic field-induced
magnetization plateaus and ferroelectricity, but its magnetic ground state
remains ambiguous due to its structural complexity. Magnetometry measurements,
and time-of-flight neutron powder diffraction (NPD) have been employed to study
the structural and magnetic properties of Co2V2O7, which consists of two
non-equivalent Co sites. Upon cooling below the Ne\'el temperature TN = 6.3 K,
we observe magnetic Bragg peaks at 2K in NPD which indicated the formation of
long range magnetic order of Co2+ moments. After symmetry analysis and magnetic
structure refinement, we demonstrate that Co2V2O7 possesses a complicated
non-collinear magnetic ground state with Co moments mainly located in b-c plane
and forming a non-collinear spin-chain-like structure along the c-axis. The ab
initio calculations demonstrate that the non-collinear magnetic structure is
more stable than various ferromagnetic states at low temperature. The
non-collinear magnetic structure with canted up-up-down-down spin configuration
is considered as the origin of magnetoelectric coupling in Co2V2O7 because the
inequivalent exchange striction induced by the spin-exchange interaction
between the neighboring spins is the driving force of ferroelectricity.
Besides, it is found that the deviation of lattice parameters a and b is
opposite below TN, while the lattice parameter c and stay almost constant below
TN, evidencing the anisotropic magnetoelastic coupling in Co2V2O7.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
First observation of bulk magnetic scattering using high-energy X-rays
Today, the most powerful methods for theinvestigation of magnetic structures are magnetic neutrondiffraction and synchrotron-X-ray scattering in the energyrange 3-15 keV. This paper reports the first successful experimentto exploit a new technique: the magnetic diffractionof hard X-rays with energies exceeding 80 keV. Thistechnique combines some of the advantages of eachof the aforementioned methods: namely high Q-spaceresolution (10 -4 /~-1 radial and 10 -5 A -1 tangential) andbulk sensitivity (absorption length >> 1 mm). It is shownthat, compared to nominally 10 keV X-ray scattering,enhancement factors of several orders of magnitude canbe obtained for the magnetic signal, owing to the increasein penetration depth. The magnetic cross section for thesevery hard X-rays is discussed, the new technique iscompared with the existing methods and a preliminaryexperiment on MnF2 is reporte
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