60 research outputs found
Structure and magnetic order in Fe2+xV1-xAl
We present a detailed structural investigation via neutron diffraction of
differently heat treated samples Fe2VAl and Fe2+xV1-xAl. Moreover, the magnetic
behaviour of these materials is studied by means of mSR and
Mossbauer-experiments. Our structural investigation indicates that quenched
Fe2VAl, exhibiting the previously reported "Kondo insulating like" behaviour,
is off-stoichiometric (6%) in its Al content. Slowly cooled Fe2VAl is
structurally better ordered and stoichiometric, and the microscopic magnetic
probes establish long range ferromagnetic order below TC = 13K, consistent with
results from bulk experiments. The magnetic state can be modelled as being
generated by diluted magnetic ions in a non-magnetic matrix. Quantitatively,
the required number of magnetic ions is too large as to be explained by a model
of Fe/V site exchange. We discuss the implications of our findings for the
ground state properties of Fe2VAl, in particular with respect to the role of
crystallographic disorder.Comment: accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Lattice Instability and Competing Spin Structures in the Double Perovskite Insulator Sr2FeOsO6
The semiconductor Sr2FeOsO6, depending on temperature, adopts two types of
spin structures that differ in the spin sequence of ferrimagnetic iron - osmium
layers along the tetragonal c-axis. Neutron powder diffraction experiments,
57Fe M\"ossbauer spectra, and density-functional theory calculations suggest
that this behavior arises because a lattice instability resulting in
alternating iron-osmium distances fine-tunes the balance of competing exchange
interactions. Thus, Sr2FeOsO6 is an example for a double perovskite, in which
the electronic phases are controlled by the interplay of spin, orbital, and
lattice degrees of freedom.Comment: 8 Pages, 3 Figure
Effect of annealing on the size dependent deformation behavior of thin cobalt films on flexible substrates
The effect of film thickness as well as the influence of heat treatment on the deformation behavior of thin cobalt films 50 2000 nm on polyimide substrates was investigated using various tensile tests. Straining under an optical light microscope provides information about the fracture strain and cracking behavior. The annealed films exhibit enhanced crack onset strains between 4 and 7 compared to the as deposited films with fracture strains of 1 2 . This is partly achieved by a mechanically induced martensitic phase transformation of cobalt from the face centered cubic FCC to the hexagonal closed packed HCP phase. Thereby, it was shown that the heat treatment can be used to increase the amount ofmetastable FCC phase. Complementary synchrotron diffraction experiments were used to determine the lattice strains which initially increase during straining. After reaching a maximum, the lattice strains decrease in the case of the as deposited films due to crack formation and in the case of the annealed films due the strain induced phase transformation and localized plastic deformation in the form of necks. At higher engineering strains, the formation of cracks is also observed in the heat treated samples. Additionally, a decrease of the maximum lattice strain could be found for the HCP phase below a film thickness of 200 nm and grain size of 50 nm in the as deposited films which is caused by crackin
Crystal and magnetic structure of the LaCaMnO compound
We studied the crystal and magnetic structure of the
LaCaMnO compound for and . At T=300 K both
samples are paramagnetic with crystallographic symmetry . At low
temperatures they undergo a monoclinic distortion from orthorhombic -type
structure with to a monoclinic
structure with (,
) and space group below . The
onset of the structural transformation coincides with the development of the
-type long range antiferromagnetic order with propagation vector . The monoclinic unit cell allowed us to determine the
direction of the Mn magnetic moment with respect to the crystallographic axes:
it is perpendicular to the propagation vector, . The amplitude of the ordered magnetic moment at K
is found to be and for and 0.85,
respectively.Comment: In press (Phys. Rev B 01 Feb 2002
Two stage cracking of metallic bi layers on polymer substrates under tension
Cu Nb nanoscale metallic multilayers have been extensively investigated to understand how their mechanical behavior is influenced by the individual layer thickness. The general observed trend is that the yield stress of the multilayer increases with decreasing layer thickness. Important mechanical behaviors that have not been studied in depth are the fracture of these multilayers and adhesion energy between the multilayer films and their substrate. Here, the influences of the layer thickness, layer order, and initial residual stresses of Cu Nb multilayers on polyimide were examined using in situ x ray diffraction and confocal laser scanning microscopy under tensile loading. With these techniques, it was possible to calculate the stresses developing in the individual materials and measure buckles that could be used to evaluate the interfacial adhesion. Layer thickness, deposition order, and the initial residual stresses were not shown to influence the initial fracture strains of the Cu Nb multilayer systems under tensile loading conditions. However, the adhesion energy between the multilayer and substrate was affected by the layer deposition order and by the initial residual stresse
Cooperative light-induced breathing of soft porous crystals via azobenzene buckling
Although light is a prominent stimulus for smart materials, the application of photoswitches as light-responsive triggers for phase transitions of porous materials remains poorly explored. Here we incorporate an azobenzene photoswitch in the backbone of a metal-organic framework producing light-induced structural contraction of the porous network in parallel to gas adsorption. Light-stimulation enables non-invasive spatiotemporal control over the mechanical properties of the framework, which ultimately leads to pore contraction and subsequent guest release via negative gas adsorption. The complex mechanism of light-gated breathing is established by a series of in situ diffraction and spectroscopic experiments, supported by quantum mechanical and molecular dynamic simulations. Unexpectedly, this study identifies a novel light-induced deformation mechanism of constrained azobenzene photoswitches relevant to the future design of light-responsive materials
Charge transfer crystallites as molecular electrical dopants
Ground-state integer charge transfer is commonly regarded as the basic mechanism of molecular electrical doping in both, conjugated polymers and oligomers. Here, we demonstrate that fundamentally different processes can occur in the two types of organic semiconductors instead. Using complementary experimental techniques supported by theory, we contrast a polythiophene, where molecular p-doping leads to integer charge transfer reportedly localized to one quaterthiophene backbone segment, to the quaterthiophene oligomer itself. Despite a comparable relative increase in conductivity, we observe only partial charge transfer for the latter. In contrast to the parent polymer, pronounced intermolecular frontier-orbital hybridization of oligomer and dopant in 1:1 mixed-stack co-crystallites leads to the emergence of empty electronic states within the energy gap of the surrounding quaterthiophene matrix. It is their Fermi–Dirac occupation that yields mobile charge carriers and, therefore, the co-crystallites—rather than individual acceptor molecules—should be regarded as the dopants in such systems
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