1,366 research outputs found
Tuning the phase transition dynamics by variation of cooling field and metastable phase fraction in Al doped PrCaMnO
We report the effect of field, temperature and thermal history on the time
dependence in resistivity and magnetization in the phase separated state of Al
doped PrCaMnO. The rate of time dependence in resistivity
is much higher than that of magnetization and it exhibits a different cooling
field dependence due to percolation effects. Our analysis show that the time
dependence in physical properties depends on the phase transition dynamics
which can be effectively tuned by variation of temperature, cooling field and
metastable phase fraction. The phase transition dynamics can be broadly divided
into the arrested and un-arrested regimes, and in the arrested regime, this
dynamics is mainly determined by time taken in the growth of critical nuclei.
An increase in cooling field and/or temperature shifts this dynamics from
arrested to un-arrested regime, and in this regime, this dynamics is determined
by thermodynamically allowed rate of formation of critical nuclei which in turn
depends on the cooling field and available metastable phase fraction. At a
given temperature, a decrease in metastable phase fraction shifts the crossover
from arrested to un-arrested regimes towards lower cooling field. It is rather
significant that inspite of the metastable phase fraction calculated from
resistivity being somewhat off from that of magnetization, their cooling field
dependence exhibits a striking similarity which indicate that the dynamics in
arrested and un-arrested regimes are so different that it comes out vividly
provided that the measurements are done around percolation threshold.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Dielectric Loss Factor in Electrically Polarized Polyvinylidene Fluoride Film Electrets By TSDC
Spin canted magnetism, decoupling of charge and spin ordering in NdNiO
We report detailed magnetization measurements on the perovskite oxide
NdNiO. This system has a first order metal-insulator (M-I) transition at
about 200 K which is associated with charge ordering. There is also a
concurrent paramagnetic to antiferromagnetic spin ordering transition in the
system. We show that the antiferromagnetic state of the nickel sublattice is
spin canted. We also show that the concurrency of the charge ordering and spin
ordering transitions is seen only while warming up the system from low
temperature. The transitions are not concurrent while cooling the system
through the M-I transition temperature. This is explained based on the fact
that the charge ordering transition is first order while the spin ordering
transition is continuous. In the magnetically ordered state the system exhibits
ZFC-FC irreversibilities, as well as history-dependent magnetization and aging.
Our analysis rules out the possibility of spin-glass or superparamagnetism and
suggests that the irreversibilities originate from magnetocrystalline
anisotropy and domain wall pinning.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Design and Analysis of Double layer Microstrip patch antenna
Volume 2 Issue 1 (January 2014
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