207 research outputs found
Topological Invariants for Polyacetylene, Kagome and Pyrochlore lattices
Adiabatic invariants by quantized Berry phases are defined for gapped
electronic systems in -dimensions (). This series includes
Polyacetylene, Kagome and Pyrochlore lattice respectively for and 3.
The invariants are quantum -multimer order parameters to characterize the
topological phase transitions by the multimerization. This fractional
quantization is protected by the global equivalence. As for the chiral
symmetric case, a topological form of the -invariant is explicitly given
as well.Comment: 4 pgages, 4 figure
Kagom\'{e} ice state in the dipolar spin ice Dy_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7}
We have investigated the kagom\'{e} ice behavior of the dipolar spin-ice
compound Dy_{2}Ti_{2}O_{7} in magnetic field along a [111] direction using
neutron scattering and Monte Carlo simulations. The spin correlations show that
the kagom\'{e} ice behavior predicted for the nearest-neighbor (NN) interacting
model, where the field induces dimensional reduction and spins are frustrated
in each two-dimensional kagom\'{e} lattice, occurs in the dipole interacting
system. The spins freeze at low temperatures within the macroscopically
degenerate ground states of the NN model.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
31P-NMR and muSR Studies of Filled Skutterudite Compound SmFe4P12: Evidence for Heavy Fermion Behavior with Ferromagnetic Ground State
The 31P-NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) and muSR (muon spin relaxation)
measurements on the filled skutterudite system SmFe4P12 have been carried out.
The temperature T dependence of the 31P-NMR spectra indicates the existence of
the crystalline electric field effect splitting of the Sm3+$ (J = 5/2)
multiplet into a ground state and an excited state of about 70 K. The
spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T1 shows the typical behavior of the Kondo
system, i.e., 1/T1 is nearly T independent above 30 K, and varies in proportion
to T (the Korringa behavior, 1/T1 \propto T) between 7.5 K and 30 K. The T
dependence deviated from the Korringa behavior below 7 K, which is independent
of T in the applied magnetic field of 1 kOe, and suppressed strongly in higher
fields. The behavior is explained as 1/T1is determined by ferromagnetic
fluctuations of the uncovered Sm3+ magnetic moments by conduction electrons.
The muSR measurements in zero field show the appearance of a static internal
field associated with the ferromagnetic order below 1.6 K.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 75 (2006
Quantum-Classical Reentrant Relaxation Crossover in Dy2Ti2O7 Spin-Ice
We have studied spin relaxation in the spin ice compound Dy2Ti2O7 through
measurements of the a.c. magnetic susceptibility. While the characteristic spin
relaxation time is thermally activated at high temperatures, it becomes almost
temperature independent below Tcross ~ 13 K, suggesting that quantum tunneling
dominates the relaxation process below that temperature. As the low-entropy
spin ice state develops below Tice ~ 4 K, the spin relaxation time increases
sharply with decreasing temperature, suggesting the emergence of a collective
degree of freedom for which thermal relaxation processes again become important
as the spins become highly correlated
Theory of Metal-Insulator Transition in PrRu4P12 and PrFe4P12
All symmetry allowed couplings between the 4f^2-electron ground state doublet
of trivalent praseodymium in PrRu4P12 and PrFe4P12 and displacements of the
phosphorus, iron or ruthenium ions are considered. Two types of displacements
can change the crystal lattice from body-centred cubic to simple orthorhombic
or to simple cubic. The first type lowers the point group symmetry from
tetrahedral to orthorhombic, while the second type leaves it unchanged, with
corresponding space group reductions Im3 --> Pmmm and Im3 --> Pm3 respectively.
In former case, the lower point-group symmetry splits the degeneracy of the
4f^2 doublet into states with opposite quadrupole moment, which then leads to
anti-quadrupolar ordering, as in PrFe4P12. Either kind of displacement may
conspire with nesting of the Fermi surface to cause the metal-insulator or
partial metal-insulator transition observed in PrFe4P12 and PrRu4P12. We
investigate this scenario using band-structure calculations, and it is found
that displacements of the phosphorus ions in PrRu4P12 (with space group
reduction Im3 --> Pm3) open a gap everywhere on the Fermi surface.Comment: 6 page
Metal-insulator transition in PrRuP and SmRuP investigated by optical spectroscopy
Electronic structures of the filled-skutterudite compounds PrRuP
and SmRuP, which undergo a metal-insulator transition (MIT) at
= 60 K and 16 K, respectively, have been studied by means of
optical spectroscopy. Their optical conductivity spectra develop an energy gap
of 10 meV below . The observed characteristics of the energy
gap are qualitatively different from those of the Kondo semiconductors. In
addition, optical phonon peaks in the spectra show anomalies upon the MIT,
including broadening and shifts at and an appearance of new peaks
below . These results are discussed in terms of density waves or
orbital ordering previously predicted for these compounds.Comment: 4pages, 4figures, submitted to Physical Review
Anisotropic Release of the Residual Zero-point Entropy in the Spin Ice Compound Dy2Ti2O7: Kagome-ice Behavior
We report the specific heat and entropy of single crystals of the spin ice
compound Dy2Ti2O7 at temperatures down to 0.35 K. We apply magnetic fields
along the four characteristic directions: [100], [110], [111] and [112].
Because of Ising anisotropy, we observe anisotropic release of the residual
zero-point entropy, attributable to the difference in frustration
dimensionality. In the high magnetic field along these four directions, the
residual entropy is almost fully released and the activation entropy reaches
Rln2. However, in the intermediate field region, the entropy in fields along
the [111] direction is different from those for the other three field
directions. For the [111] direction the frustration structure changes from that
of three-dimensional(3D) pyrochlore to that of two-dimensional(2D) Kagome-like
lattice with constraint due to the ice rule, leading to different values of
zero-point entropy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Depleted pyrochlore antiferromagnets
I consider the class of "depleted pyrochlore" lattices of corner-sharing
triangles, made by removing spins from a pyrochlore lattice such that every
tetrahedron loses exactly one. Previously known examples are the "hyperkagome"
and "kagome staircase". I give criteria in terms of loops for whether a given
depleted lattice can order analogous to the kagome \sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{three}
state, and also show how the pseudo-dipolar correlations (due to local
constraints) generalize to even the random depleted case.Comment: 6pp IOP latex, 1 figure; Proc. "Highly Frustrated Magnetism 2008",
Sept 2008, Braunschwei
Dynamic behavior of magnetic avalanches in the spin-ice compound DyTiO
Avalanches of the magnetization, that is to say an abrupt reversal of the
magnetization at a given field, have been previously reported in the spin-ice
compound DyTiO. This out-of-equilibrium process, induced by
magneto-thermal heating, is quite usual in low temperature magnetization
studies. A key point is to determine the physical origin of the avalanche
process. In particular, in spin-ice compounds, the origin of the avalanches
might be related to the monopole physics inherent to the system. We have
performed a detailed study of the avalanche phenomena in three single crystals,
with the field oriented along the [111] direction, perpendicular to [111] and
along the [100] directions. We have measured the changing magnetization during
the avalanches and conclude that avalanches in spin ice are quite slow compared
to the avalanches reported in other systems such as molecular magnets. Our
measurements show that the avalanches trigger after a delay of about 500 ms and
that the reversal of the magnetization then occurs in a few hundreds of
milliseconds. These features suggest an unusual propagation of the reversal,
which might be due to the monopole motion. The avalanche fields seem to be
reproducible in a given direction for different samples, but they strongly
depend on the initial state of magnetization and on how the initial state was
achieved.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
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