17 research outputs found
Magnetic field-induced one-magnon Raman scattering in the magnon Bose-Einstein condensation phase of TlCuCl
We report the observation of the -symmetric one-magnon Raman peak
in the magnon Bose-Einstein condensation phase of TlCuCl. Its Raman shift
traces the one-magnon energy at the magnetic point, and its intensity
is proportional to the squared transverse magnetization. The appearance of the
one-magnon Raman scattering originates from the exchange magnon Raman process
and reflects the change of the magnetic-state symmetry. Using the bond-operator
representation, we theoretically clarify the Raman selection rules, being
consistent with the experimental results.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Successive phase transitions to antiferromagnetic and weak-ferromagnetic long-range orders in quasi-one-dimensional antiferromagnet CuMoO
Investigation of the magnetism of CuMoO single crystal, which has
antiferromagnetic (AF) linear chains interacting with AF dimers, reveals an AF
second-order phase transition at K. Although weak
ferromagnetic-like behavior appears at lower temperatures in low magnetic
fields, complete remanent magnetization cannot be detected down to 0.5 K.
However, a jump is observed in the magnetization below weak ferromagnetic (WF)
phase transition at K when a tiny magnetic field along
the a axis is reversed, suggesting that the coercive force is very weak. A
component of magnetic moment parallel to the chain forms AF long-range order
(LRO) below , while a perpendicular component is disordered above
at zero magnetic field and forms WF-LRO below .
Moreover, the WF-LRO is also realized with applying magnetic fields even
between and . These results are explainable by both
magnetic frustration among symmetric exchange interactions and competition
between symmetric and asymmetric Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya exchange interactions.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Impurity Substitution Effect on Magnetoelectric Properties of CaBaCo4O7 Crystals
AbstractWe have investigated effects of impurity substitution of Fe for Co sites on magnetic and dielectric properties in CaBa(Co1-xFex)4O7 crystals in magnetic fields. The non-doped compound, CaBaCo4O7 with the polar space group Pbn21, shows a large change of electric polarization ΔP along the c axis below a ferrimagnetic transition temperature. With increasing x, the transition temperatures for the ferrimagnetic and ferroelectric-like phases are shifted towards lower and these phases are completely collapsed above x=1.56%. We have also investigated the magnetic field effects for CaBa(Co1-xFex)4O7 crystal with a doping level x=0.5% where the ferrimagnetic and ferroelectric-like phases sustain. Then a relatively large magnetocapacitance, Δɛ(H)/ɛ(0) [ɛ(H) – ɛ(0)]/ɛ(0), of 45% at 58K was observed, which is not significantly reduced from the parent compound
Confirmation of a one-dimensional spin-1/2 Heisenberg system with ferromagnetic first-nearest-neighbor and antiferromagnetic second-nearest-neighbor interactions in RbCuMoO
We have investigated magnetic properties of RbCuMoO
powder. Temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility and magnetic-field
dependence of magnetization have shown that this cuprate is a model compound of
a one-dimensional spin-1/2 Heisenberg system with ferromagnetic
first-nearest-neighbor (1NN) and antiferromagnetic second-nearest-neighbor
(2NN) competing interactions (competing system). Values of the 1NN and 2NN
interactions are estimated as K and K (). This value of suggests that the ground state is a
spin-singlet incommensurate state. In spite of relatively large and
, no magnetic phase transition appears down to 2 K, while an
antiferromagnetic transition occurs in other model compounds of the competing
system with ferromagnetic 1NN interaction. For that reason,
RbCuMoO is an ideal model compound to study properties of
the incommensurate ground state that are unconfirmed experimentally.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Spin fluctuations in CuGeO probed by light scattering
We have measured temperature dependence of low-frequency Raman spectra in
CuGeO, and have observed the quasi-elastic scattering in the
polarization above the spin-Peierls transition temperature. We attribute it to
the fluctuations of energy density in the spin system. The magnetic specific
heat and an inverse of the magnetic correlation length can be derived from the
quasi-elastic scattering. The inverse of the magnetic correlation length is
proportional to at high temperatures. We compare the
specific heat with a competing- model. This model cannot explain
quantitatively both the specific heat and the magnetic susceptibility with the
same parameters. The origin of this discrepancy is discussed.Comment: 17 pages, REVTeX, 5 Postscript figures; in press in PR