350 research outputs found

    Commensurate to incommensurate magnetic phase transition in Honeycomb-lattice pyrovanadate Mn2V2O7

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    We have synthesized single crystalline sample of Mn2_2V2_2O7_7 using floating zone technique and investigated the ground state using magnetic susceptibility, heat capacity and neutron diffraction. Our magnetic susceptibility and heat capacity reveal two successive magnetic transitions at TN1=T_{N1} = 19 K and TN2=T_{N2} = 11.8 K indicating two distinct magnetically ordered phases. The single crystal neutron diffraction study shows that in the temperature (TT) range 11.8 K ≤T≤\le T \le 19 K the magnetic structure is commensurate with propagation vector k1=(0,0.5,0)k_1 = (0, 0.5, 0), while upon lowering temperature below TN2=T_{N2} = 11.8 K an incommensurate magnetic order emerges with k2=(0.38,0.48,0.5)k_2 = (0.38, 0.48, 0.5) and the magnetic structure can be represented by cycloidal modulation of the Mn spin in ac−ac-plane. We are reporting this commensurate to incommensurate transition for the first time. We discuss the role of the magnetic exchange interactions and spin-orbital coupling on the stability of the observed magnetic phase transitions.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Interplay of atomic displacements in the quantum magnet (CuCl)LaNb2O7

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    We report on the crystal structure of the quantum magnet (CuCl)LaNb2O7 that was controversially described with respect to its structural organization and magnetic behavior. Using high-resolution synchrotron powder x-ray diffraction, electron diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and band structure calculations, we solve the room-temperature structure of this compound [alpha-(CuCl)LaNb2O7] and find two high-temperature polymorphs. The gamma-(CuCl)LaNb2O7 phase, stable above 640K, is tetragonal with a(sub) = 3.889 A, c(sub) = 11.738 A, and the space group P4/mmm. In the gamma-(CuCl)LaNb2O7 structure, the Cu and Cl atoms are randomly displaced from the special positions along the {100} directions. The beta-phase [a(sub) x 2a(sub) x c(sub), space group Pbmm] and the alpha-phase [2a(sub) x 2a(sub) x c(sub), space group Pbam] are stable between 640 K and 500 K and below 500 K, respectively. The structural changes at 500 K and 640 K are identified as order-disorder phase transitions. The displacement of the Cl atoms is frozen upon the gamma --> beta transformation, while a cooperative tilting of the NbO6 octahedra in the alpha-phase further eliminates the disorder of the Cu atoms. The low-temperature alpha-(CuCl)LaNb2O7 structure thus combines the two types of the atomic displacements that interfere due to the bonding between the Cu atoms and the apical oxygens of the NbO6 octahedra. The precise structural information resolves the controversy between the previous computation-based models and provides the long-sought input for understanding the magnetic properties of (CuCl)LaNb2O7.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables; crystallographic information (cif files) include

    Magnetic structure and charge ordering in Fe3BO5 ludwigite

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    The crystal and magnetic structures of the three-leg ladder compound Fe3BO5 have been investigated by single crystal x-ray diffraction and neutron powder diffraction. Fe3BO5 contains two types of three-leg spin ladders. It shows a charge ordering transition at 283 K, an antiferromagnetic transition at 112 K, ferromagnetism below 70 K and a weak ferromagnetic behavior below 40K. The x-ray data reveal a smooth charge ordering and an incomplete charge localization down to 110K. Below the first magnetic transition, the first type of ladders orders as ferromagnetically coupled antiferromagnetic chains, while below 70K the second type of ladders orders as antiferromagnetically coupled ferromagnetic chains

    Two pressure-induced structural phase transitions in TiOCl

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    We studied the crystal structure of TiOCl up to pressures of pp=25~GPa at room temperature by x-ray powder diffraction measurements. Two pressure-induced structural phase transitions are observed: At pc1p_{c1}≈\approx15~GPa emerges an 2aa×\times2bb×\timescc superstructure with bb-axis unique monoclinic symmetry (space group P21_1/mm). At pc2p_{c2}≈\approx22~GPa all lattice parameters of the monoclinic phase show a pronounced anomaly. A fraction of the sample persists in the ambient orthorhombic phase (space group PmmnPmmn) over the whole pressure range.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Electronic correlations in FeGa3 and the effect of hole doping on its magnetic properties

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    We investigate signatures of electronic correlations in the narrow-gap semiconductor FeGa 3 by means of electrical resistivity and thermodynamic measurements performed on single crystals of FeGa 3 , Fe 1−x Mn x Ga 3 , and FeGa 3−y Zn y , complemented by a study of the 4d analog material RuGa 3 . We find that the inclusion of sizable amounts of Mn and Zn dopants into FeGa 3 does not induce an insulator-to-metal transition. Our study indicates that both substitution of Zn onto the Ga site and replacement of Fe by Mn introduces states into the semiconducting gap that remain localized even at highest doping levels. Most importantly, using neutron powder diffraction measurements, we establish that FeGa 3 orders magnetically above room temperature in a complex structure, which is almost unaffected by the doping with Mn and Zn. Using realistic many-body calculations within the framework of dynamical mean field theory (DMFT), we argue that while the iron atoms in FeGa 3 are dominantly in an S=1 state, there are strong charge and spin fluctuations on short-time scales, which are independent of temperature. Further, the low magnitude of local contributions to the spin susceptibility advocates an itinerant mechanism for the spin response in FeGa 3 . Our joint experimental and theoretical investigations classify FeGa 3 as a correlated band insulator with only small dynamical correlation effects, in which nonlocal exchange interactions are responsible for the spin gap of 0.4 eV and the antiferromagnetic order. We show that hole doping of FeGa 3 leads, within DMFT, to a notable strengthening of many-body renormalizations

    Three-dimensional checkerboard spin structure on a breathing pyrochlore lattice

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    The standard approach to realize a spin liquid state is through magnetically frustrated states, relying on ingredients such as the lattice geometry, dimensionality, and magnetic interaction type of the spins. While Heisenberg spins on a pyrochlore lattice with only antiferromagnetic nearest neighbors interactions are theoretically proven disordered, spins in real systems generally include longer-range interactions. The spatial correlations at longer distances typically stabilize a long-range order rather than enhancing a spin liquid state. Both states can, however, be destroyed by short-range static correlations introduced by chemical disorder. Here, using disorder-free specimens with a clear long-range antiferromagnetic order, we refine the spin structure of the Heisenberg spinel ZnFe2O4 through neutron magnetic diffraction. The unique wave vector (1, 0, 1/2) leads to a spin structure that can be viewed as alternatively stacked ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic tetrahedra in a three-dimensional checkerboard form. Stable coexistence of these opposing types of clusters is enabled by the bipartite breathing-pyrochlore crystal structure, leading to a second order phase transition at 10 K. The diffraction intensity of ZnFe2O4 is an exact complement to the inelastic scattering intensity of several chromate spinel systems which are regarded as model classical spin liquids. Our results challenge this attribution, and suggest instead of the six-spin ring-mode, spin excitations in chromate spinels are closely related to the (1, 0, 1/2) type of spin order and the four-spin ferromagnetic cluster locally at one tetrahedron.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Kaemika app, Integrating protocols and chemical simulation

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    Kaemika is an app available on the four major app stores. It provides deterministic and stochastic simulation, supporting natural chemical notation enhanced with recursive and conditional generation of chemical reaction networks. It has a liquid-handling protocol sublanguage compiled to a virtual digital microfluidic device. Chemical and microfluidic simulations can be interleaved for full experimental-cycle modeling. A novel and unambiguous representation of directed multigraphs is used to lay out chemical reaction networks in graphical form

    Double superconducting transition in the filled skutterudite PrOs4Sb12 and sample characterizations

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    A thorough characterization of many samples of the filled skutterudite compound PrOs4Sb12 is provided. We find that the double superconducting transition in the specific heat Tc1~1.89K and Tc2~1.72K tends to appear in samples with a large residual resistivity ratio, large specific heat jump at the superconducting transition and with the highest absolute value of the specific heat above Tc1. However, we present evidence which casts doubt on the intrinsic nature of the double superconducting transition. The ratio of the two specific heat jumps \Delta C(Tc1)/\Delta C(Tc2) shows a wide range of values on crystals from different batches but also within the same batch. This ratio was strongly reduced by polishing a sample down to 120um. Remarkably, three samples exhibit a single sharp transition of ~15mK in width at Tc~1.7K. The normalized specific heat jump (C-Cnormal)/Cnormal at Tc of two of them is higher than ~32% so larger than the sum of the two specific heat jumps when a double transition exists. As an evidence of better quality, the slope in the transition is at least two time steeper. We discuss the origins of the double transition; in particular we consider, based on X-ray diffraction results, a scenario involving Pr-vacancies. The superconducting phase diagram under magnetic field of a sample with a single transition is fitted with a two-band model taking into account the good values for the gap as deduced from thermal conductivity measurements.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, submitted to Physical review
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