251 research outputs found

    Specific heat in magnetic field and magnetocaloric effects of α-R2S3 (R = Tb, Dy) single crystals

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    The magnetocaloric effects (MCE) of α-Tb2S3 and α-Dy2S3 single crystals exhibiting successive antiferromagnetic (AFM) transitions have been investigated by analyzing specific heat measured in magnetic field. The temperature dependence of specific heat in the vicinity of the successive transitions shows obvious distinction depending on the orientations of the applied magnetic field for both α-Tb2S3 and α-Dy2S3 that having orthorhombic crystal structures. When the magnetic field is increased, the specific heat is as follows: For α-Tb2S3 in H‖b, the peak around TN2 shifts to lower temperature but the other one peak around TN1 barely moves; In H⊥b, the peak around TN2 has no shift almost within 3 T but suddenly moves to lower temperature in 4 T and the other one peak around TN1 shifts to lower temperature in specific heat versus temperature. In the case of α-Dy2S3, the two peaks around TN2 and TN1 shift to lower temperatures in H‖b but move to higher temperatures when the magnetic field is increased up to 5 T by H⊥b in spite of antiferromagnetic transitions. Therefore, the maximum value and corresponding temperature of both isothermal magnetic entropy change (ΔSm) and adiabatic temperature change (ΔTad) in the magnetic field H⊥b are extremely different in low temperature range from that in the field of H‖b. The results propone that the MCE of α-Tb2S3 and α-Dy2S3 could be controlled at low temperature by the magnitude and orientation of magnetic field. It also indicates that the refrigerating capacity and thermal absorption capacity will be controlled by changing magnitude and orientation of magnetic field on the α-Tb2S3 and α-Dy2S3 single crystals

    Structure, magnetism, and magnetocaloric properties of MnFeP1−xSix compounds

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    MnFeP1-xSix compounds with x=0.10,0.20,0.24,0.28,...,0.80,1 were prepared by high-energy ball milling and solid-state reaction. The structural, magnetic, and magnetocaloric properties are investigated as a function of temperature and magnetic field. X-ray diffraction studies show that the samples in the range from x=0.28 to 0.64 adopt the hexagonal Fe2P-type structure with a small amount of second phase which increases with increasing Si content. The samples with lower Si content show the orthorhombic Co2P-type structure. Magnetic measurements show that the paramagnetic-ferromagnetic transition temperatures range from 214 to 377 K. Of much importance is the fact that these compounds do not contain any toxic components and exhibit excellent magnetocaloric properties

    Anisotropy study on thermionic emission and magnetoresistivity of single crystal CeB<sub>6</sub>

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    Kondo hybridisation and the origin of metallic states at the (001) surface of SmB6

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    SmB6, a well-known Kondo insulator, has been proposed to be an ideal topological insulator with states of topological character located in a clean, bulk electronic gap, namely the Kondo hybridisation gap. Seeing as the Kondo gap arises from many body electronic correlations, this would place SmB6 at the head of a new material class: topological Kondo insulators. Here, for the first time, we show that the k-space characteristics of the Kondo hybridisation process is the key to unravelling the origin of the two types of metallic states observed directly by ARPES in the electronic band structure of SmB6(001). One group of these states is essentially of bulk origin, and cuts the Fermi level due to the position of the chemical potential 20 meV above the lowest lying 5d-4f hybridisation zone. The other metallic state is more enigmatic, being weak in intensity, but represents a good candidate for a topological surface state. However, before this claim can be substantiated by an unequivocal measurement of its massless dispersion relation, our data raises the bar in terms of the ARPES resolution required, as we show there to be a strong renormalisation of the hybridisation gaps by a factor 2-3 compared to theory, following from the knowledge of the true position of the chemical potential and a careful comparison with the predictions from recent LDA+Gutzwiler calculations. All in all, these key pieces of evidence act as triangulation markers, providing a detailed description of the electronic landscape in SmB6, pointing the way for future, ultrahigh resolution ARPES experiments to achieve a direct measurement of the Dirac cones in the first topological Kondo insulator.Comment: 9 pages, 4 Figures and supplementary material (including Movies and CORPES13 "best prize" poster

    Inverse magnetocaloric effect in ferromagnetic Ni-Mn-Sn alloys

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    The magnetocaloric effect (MCE) in paramagnetic materials has been widely used for attaining very low temperatures by applying a magnetic field isothermally and removing it adiabatically. The effect can be exploited also for room temperature refrigeration by using recently discovered giant MCE materials. In this letter, we report on an inverse situation in Ni-Mn-Sn alloys, whereby applying a magnetic field adiabatically, rather than removing it, causes the sample to cool. This has been known to occur in some intermetallic compounds, for which a moderate entropy increase can be induced when a field is applied, thus giving rise to an inverse magnetocaloric effect. However, the entropy change found for some ferromagnetic Ni-Mn-Sn alloys is just as large as that reported for giant MCE materials, but with opposite sign. The giant inverse MCE has its origin in a martensitic phase transformation that modifies the magnetic exchange interactions due to the change in the lattice parameters.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Nature Materials (online published, 15 May 2005

    Exotic (anti)ferromagnetism in single crystals of Pr6Ni2Si3

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    The ternary intermetallic compound Pr6Ni2Si3, is a member of a structure series of compounds based on a triangular structure where the number of Pr atoms in the prism cross section can be systematically varied. Pr6Ni2Si3 contains two distinct Pr lattice sites which result in complex interactions between the magnetic ions. Extensive measurements of specific heat and magnetization on single crystal samples indicate that Pr6Ni2Si3 orders with both a ferromagnet and an antiferromagnet component, with ordering temperatures of 39.6 K and ~ 32 K, respectively. The ferromagnetic component // c-axis is accompanied by a large hysteresis, and the antiferromagnetic component,_|_ c-axis is accompanied by a spin-flop-type transition. More detailed measurements, of the vector magnetization, indicate that the ferromagnetic and the antiferromagnetic order appear independent of each other. These results not only clarify the behavior of Pr6Ni2Si3 itself, but also of the other members of the structure series, Pr5Ni2Si3 and Pr15Ni7Si10.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figures, submitted to PR
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