515 research outputs found
Low-Temperature Features of Nano-Particle Dynamics
In view of better characterizing possible quantum effects in the dynamics of
nanometric particles, we measure the effect on the relaxation of a slight
heating cycle. The effect of the field amplitude is studied; its magnitude is
chosen in order to induce the relaxation of large particles (~7nm), even at
very low temperatures (100mK). Below 1K, the results significantly depart from
a simple thermal dynamics scenario.Comment: 1 tex file, 4 PostScript figure
A new experimental procedure for characterizing quantum effects in small magnetic particle systems
A new experimental procedure is discussed, which aims at separating thermal
from quantum behavior independently of the energy barrier distribution in small
particle systems.
Magnetization relaxation data measured between 60 mK and 5 K on a sample of
nanoparticles is presented. The comparison between experimental data and
numerical calculations shows a clear departure from thermal dynamics for our
sample, which was not obvious without using the new procedure presented here.Comment: LaTeX source, 6 pages, 5 PostScript figure
Disentangling Distribution Effects and Nature of the Dynamics in Relaxation Measurements: the RMR Method
URL: http://www-spht.cea.fr/articles/s00/004 (sur invitation). Comment séparer les effets de distribution et la nature de la dynamique dans des mesures de relaxation magnétiques: la méthode RMRWe discuss here the nature of the low temperature magnetic relaxation in samples of magnetic nanoparticles. In addition to usual magnetic viscosity measurement, we have used the Residual Memory Ratio (RMR) method. This procedure enables us to overcome the uncertainties usually associated with the energy barrier distribution, thus giving a more detailed insight on the nature of the observed dynamics. A custom made apparatus coupling dilution refrigeration and SQUID magnetometry allowed measurements of very diluted samples at temperatures ranging between 60mK and 7K. Two types of particles have been studied: -FeO of moderate anisotropy, and CoFeO of higher anisotropy where quantum effects are more likely to occur. In both cases, the data cannot simply be interpreted in terms of mere thermally activated dynamics of independent particles. The deviation from thermal activation seems to go opposite of what is expected from the possible effect of particle interactions. We therefore believe that it suggests the occurrence of quantum dynamics at very low temperatures
The relative influences of disorder and of frustration on the glassy dynamics in magnetic systems
The magnetisation relaxations of three different types of geometrically
frustrated magnetic systems have been studied with the same experimental
procedures as previously used in spin glasses. The materials investigated are
YMoO (pyrochlore system), SrCrGaO (piled
pairs of Kagom\'e layers) and (HO)Fe(SO)(OH) (jarosite
compound). Despite a very small amount of disorder, all the samples exhibit
many characteristic features of spin glass dynamics below a freezing
temperature , much smaller than their Curie-Weiss temperature .
The ageing properties of their thermoremanent magnetization can be well
accounted for by the same scaling law as in spin glasses, and the values of the
scaling exponents are very close. The effects of temperature variations during
ageing have been specifically investigated. In the pyrochlore and the
bi-Kagom\'e compounds, a decrease of temperature after some waiting period at a
certain temperature re-initializes ageing and the evolution at the new
temperature is the same as if the system were just quenched from above .
However, as the temperature is raised back to , the sample recovers the
state it had previously reached at that temperature. These features are known
in spin glasses as rejuvenation and memory effects. They are clear signatures
of the spin glass dynamics. In the Kagom\'e compound, there is also some
rejuvenation and memory, but much larger temperature changes are needed to
observe the effects. In that sense, the behaviour of this compound is
quantitatively different from that of spin glasses.Comment: latex VersionCorrigee4.tex, 4 files, 3 figures, 5 pages (Proceedings
of the International Conference on Highly Frustrated Magnetism (HFM2003),
August 26-30, 2003, Institut Laue Langevin (ILL), Grenoble, France
Linear response subordination to intermittent energy release in off-equilibrium aging dynamics
The interpretation of experimental and numerical data describing
off-equilibrium aging dynamics crucially depends on the connection between
spontaneous and induced fluctuations. The hypothesis that linear response
fluctuations are statistically subordinated to irreversible outbursts of
energy, so-called quakes, leads to predictions for averages and fluctuations
spectra of physical observables in reasonable agreement with experimental
results [see e.g. Sibani et al., Phys. Rev. B74:224407, 2006]. Using
simulational data from a simple but representative Ising model with plaquette
interactions, direct statistical evidence supporting the hypothesis is
presented and discussed in this work.
A strict temporal correlation between quakes and intermittent magnetization
fluctuations is demonstrated. The external magnetic field is shown to bias the
pre-existent intermittent tails of the magnetic fluctuation distribution, with
little or no effect on the Gaussian part of the latter. Its impact on energy
fluctuations is shown to be negligible.
Linear response is thus controlled by the quakes and inherits their temporal
statistics. These findings provide a theoretical basis for analyzing
intermittent linear response data from aging system in the same way as thermal
energy fluctuations, which are far more difficult to measure.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures. Text improve
Oxidant-controlled regioselectivity in the oxidative arylation of N-acetylindoles
N-Acetylindoles can be oxidatively coupled with arenes such as benzene or pentafluorobenzene in dioxane. The use of Cu(OAc)2 as the stoichiometric oxidant produces selective arylation at the 3-position of indole while AgOAc produces selective arylation at indole’s 2-position.
[Refer to PDF for graphical abstract
Extraction of the Spin Glass Correlation Length
The peak of the spin glass relaxation rate, S(t)=d{-M_{TRM}(t,t_w)}/H/{d ln
t}, is directly related to the typical value of the free energy barrier which
can be explored over experimental time scales. A change in magnetic field H
generates an energy E_z={N_s}{X_fc}{H^2} by which the barrier heights are
reduced, where X_{fc} is the field cooled susceptibility per spin, and N_s is
the number of correlated spins. The shift of the peak of S(t) gives E_z,
generating the correlation length, Ksi(t,T), for Cu:Mn 6at.% and
CdCr_{1.7}In_{0.3}S_4. Fits to power law dynamics, Ksi(t,T)\propto
{t}^{\alpha(T)} and activated dynamics Ksi(t,T) \propto {ln t}^{1/psi} compare
well with simulation fits, but possess too small a prefactor for activated
dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Department of Physics, University of California,
Riverside, California, and Service de Physique de l'Etat Condense, CEA
Saclay, Gif sur Yvette, France. To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. January 4, 199
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