104 research outputs found
Structural and Magnetic Properties of Manganites Pr\u3csub\u3e1-\u3cem\u3ex\u3c/em\u3e\u3c/sub\u3eCa\u3csub\u3e1+\u3cem\u3ex\u3c/em\u3e\u3c/sub\u3eMnO\u3csub\u3e4\u3c/sub\u3e, Oxypnictides CeFeAsO\u3csub\u3e1-\u3cem\u3ex\u3c/em\u3e\u3c/sub\u3eF\u3csub\u3e\u3cem\u3ex\u3c/em\u3e\u3c/sub\u3e, and Filled Skutterudite PrOs\u3csub\u3e4\u3c/sub\u3eAs\u3csub\u3e12\u3c/sub\u3e
We present neutron scattering, with triple-axis and time-of-flight spectrometers, to study the structural and magnetic properties of the layered manganites Pr1-xCa1+xMnO4 (PCMO), and to determine the crystalline electric field (CEF) levels in iron pnictides CeFeAsO1-xFx and filled skutterudite compound PrOs4As12.
For the single-layered manganites PCMO, four dopings (x=0.5, 0.45, 0.40 and 0.35) have been studied. At half-doping, the system first becomes charge- and orbital- ordered (CO/OO) near TCO = 300 K and then develops CE-type antiferromagnetic (AF) order below TN = 130 K. At temperatures TN \u3c T \u3c TCO, the appearance of short-range AF spin correlations suppresses the CO/OO induced orthorhombic strain. These results suggest that a strong spin-lattice coupling.
In less hole-doped PCMO (x \u3c 0:5) compounds, the long-range, three-dimensional anti- ferromagnetic (AF) correlations at x = 0:5 are suppressed. Most remarkably, the magnetic correlations appear in the form of coexisting commensurate (CM) and incommensurate (ICM) fluctuations with strong temperature and doping dependence.
The spin-wave measurement on PCMO (x = 0:5) shows good agreement with a mag- netic interaction model based on the CE-type arrangement. The magnetic excitations are dominated by ferromagnetic exchange along the zig-zag chain, while the antiferromagnetic coupling between the chains is relatively weak. The INS measurement on the x = 0:45 system reveals both symmetric and asymmetric magnetic excitations about the CM peak positions: one dispersive spin wave indicative of the x = 0:5 system; and another localized mode at about 1 meV. This strongly suggests two types of spin dynamics originated from separated phases: the CE-type magnetic phase and an additional electronic phase caused by extra electrons introduced into the CE template
Magnetic excitations and anomalous spin wave broadening in multiferroic FeV2O4
We report on the different roles of two orbital-active Fe at the A
site and V at the B site in the magnetic excitations and on the
anomalous spin wave broadening in FeVO. FeVO exhibits
three structural transitions and successive paramagnetic (PM)-collinear
ferrimagnetic (CFI)-noncollinear ferrimagnetic (NCFI) transitions. The
high-temperature tetragonal/PM -orthorhombic/CFI transition is accompanied by
the appearance of an energy gap with a high magnitude in the magnetic
excitations due to strong spin-orbit coupling induced anisotropy at the
Fe site. While there is no measurable increase in the energy gap from
the orbital ordering of V at the orthorhombic/CFI-tetragonal/NCFI
transition, anomalous spin wave broadening is observed in the orthorhombic/CFI
state due to V spin fluctuations at the B site. The spin wave broadening
is also observed at the zone boundary without softening, which is discussed in
terms of magnon-phonon coupling.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, including one supplemental materia
The magnetic and crystal structures of Sr2IrO4: A neutron diffraction study
We report a single-crystal neutron diffraction study of the layered . This work unambiguously determines the magnetic structure of the
system and reveals that the spin orientation rigidly tracks the staggered
rotation of the octahedra in . The long-range
antiferromagnetic order has a canted spin configuration with an ordered moment
of 0.208(3) /Ir site within the basal plane; a detailed examination of
the spin canting yields 0.202(3) and 0.049(2) /site for the a axis and
the b axis, respectively. It is intriguing that forbidden nuclear reflections
of space group are also observed in a wide temperature range from 4
K to 600 K, which suggests a reduced crystal structure symmetry. This
neutron-scattering work provides a direct, well-refined experimental
characterization of the magnetic and crystal structures that are crucial to the
understanding of the unconventional magnetism exhibited in this unusual
magnetic insulator.Comment: the version appeared in PR
Two spatially separated phases in semiconducting RbFeS
We report neutron scattering and transport measurements on semiconducting
RbFeS, a compound isostructural and isoelectronic to the
well-studied FeSe K, Rb, Cs, Tl/K) superconducting
systems. Both resistivity and DC susceptibility measurements reveal a magnetic
phase transition at K. Neutron diffraction studies show that the 275 K
transition originates from a phase with rhombic iron vacancy order which
exhibits an in-plane stripe antiferromagnetic ordering below 275 K. In
addition, interdigitated mesoscopically with the rhombic phase is an ubiquitous
phase with iron vacancy order. This phase has a
magnetic transition at K and an iron vacancy order-disorder
transition at K. These two different structural phases are closely
similar to those observed in the isomorphous Se materials. Based on the close
similarities of the in-plane antiferromagnetic structures, moments sizes, and
ordering temperatures in semiconducting RbFeS and
KFeSe, we argue that the in-plane antiferromagnetic order
arises from strong coupling between local moments. Superconductivity,
previously observed in the FeSeS system, is absent
in RbFeS, which has a semiconducting ground state. The
implied relationship between stripe/block antiferromagnetism and
superconductivity in these materials as well as a strategy for further
investigation is discussed in this paper.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Antiferromagnetic critical pressure in URu2Si2 under hydrostatic conditions
The onset of antiferromagnetic order in URu2Si2 has been studied via neutron
diffraction in a helium pressure medium, which most closely approximates
hydrostatic conditions. The antiferromagnetic critical pressure is 0.80 GPa,
considerably higher than values previously reported. Complementary electrical
resistivity measurements imply that the hidden order-antiferromagnetic
bicritical point far exceeds 1.02 GPa. Moreover, the redefined
pressure-temperature phase diagram suggests that the superconducting and
antiferromagnetic phase boundaries actually meet at a common critical pressure
at zero temperature.Comment: 5 pgs, 4 figs; AFM ordered moment revised to 0.5 muB, added and
corrected citations and reference
Effect of magnetic field on the spin resonance in FeTe(0.5)Se(0.5) as seen via inelastic neutron scattering
Inelastic neutron scattering and susceptibility measurements have been
performed on the optimally-doped Fe-based superconductor FeTe(0.5)Se(0.5),
which has a critical temperature, Tc of 14 K. The magnetic scattering at the
stripe antiferromagnetic wave-vector Q = (0.5,0.5) exhibits a "resonance" at ~
6 meV, where the scattering intensity increases abruptly when cooled below Tc.
In a 7-T magnetic field parallel to the a-b plane, Tc is slightly reduced to ~
12 K, based on susceptibility measurements. The resonance in the neutron
scattering measurements is also affected by the field. The resonance intensity
under field cooling starts to rise at a lower temperature ~ 12 K, and the low
temperature intensity is also reduced from the zero-field value. Our results
provide clear evidence for the intimate relationship between superconductivity
and the resonance measured in magnetic excitations of Fe-based superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Destruction of Neel order and appearance of superconductivity in electron-doped cuprates by oxygen annealing process
We use thermodynamic and neutron scattering measurements to study the effect
of oxygen annealing on the superconductivity and magnetism in
PrLaCeCuO. Although the transition temperature
measured by susceptibility and superconducting coherence length increase
smoothly with gradual oxygen removal from the annealing process, bulk
superconductivity, marked by a specific heat anomaly at and the presence
of a neutron magnetic resonance, only appears abruptly when is close to
the largest value. These results suggest that the effect of oxygen annealing
must be first determined in order to establish a Ce-doping dependence of
antiferromagnetism and superconductivity phase diagram for electron-doped
copper oxides.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
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