33 research outputs found
Magnetic phase diagram of the helimagnetic spinel compound ZnCr2Se4 revisited by small-angle neutron scattering
We performed small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements on the
helimagnetic spinel compound ZnCr2Se4. The ground state of this material is a
multi-domain spin-spiral phase, which undergoes domain selection in a magnetic
field and reportedly exhibits a transition to a proposed spin-nematic phase at
higher fields. We observed a continuous change in the magnetic structure as a
function of field and temperature, as well as a weak discontinuous jump in the
spiral pitch across the domain-selection transition upon increasing field. From
our SANS results we have established the absence of any long-range magnetic
order in the high-field (spin-nematic) phase. We also found that all the
observed phase transitions are surprisingly isotropic with respect to the field
direction
One-Dimensional Dispersive Magnon Excitation in the Frustrated Spin-2 Chain System Ca3Co2O6
Using inelastic neutron scattering, we have observed a quasi-one-dimensional
dispersive magnetic excitation in the frustrated triangular-lattice spin-2
chain oxide Ca3Co2O6. At the lowest temperature (T = 1.5 K), this magnon is
characterized by a large zone-center spin gap of ~27 meV, which we attribute to
the large single-ion anisotropy, and disperses along the chain direction with a
bandwidth of ~3.5 meV. In the directions orthogonal to the chains, no
measurable dispersion was found. With increasing temperature, the magnon
dispersion shifts towards lower energies, yet persists up to at least 150 K,
indicating that the ferromagnetic intrachain correlations survive up to 6 times
higher temperatures than the long-range interchain antiferromagnetic order. The
magnon dispersion can be well described within the predictions of linear
spin-wave theory for a system of weakly coupled ferromagnetic chains with large
single-ion anisotropy, enabling the direct quantitative determination of the
magnetic exchange and anisotropy parameters.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures including one animatio
Local origin of the strong field-space anisotropy in the magnetic phase diagrams of CeLaB measured in a rotating magnetic field
Cubic f-electron compounds commonly exhibit highly anisotropic magnetic phase
diagrams consisting of multiple long-range ordered phases. Field-driven
metamagnetic transitions between them may depend not only on the magnitude, but
also on the direction of the applied magnetic field. Examples of such behavior
are plentiful among rare-earth borides, such as RB or RB ( = rare
earth). In this work, for example, we use torque magnetometry to measure
anisotropic field-angular phase diagrams of La-doped cerium hexaborides,
CeLaB ( = 0, 0.18, 0.28, 0.5). One expects that
field-directional anisotropy of phase transitions must be impossible to
understand without knowing the magnetic structures of the corresponding
competing phases and being able to evaluate their precise thermodynamic energy
balance. However, this task is usually beyond the reach of available
theoretical approaches, because the ordered phases can be noncollinear, possess
large magnetic unit cells, involve higher-order multipoles of 4f ions rather
than simple dipoles, or just lack sufficient microscopic characterization. Here
we demonstrate that the anisotropy under field rotation can be qualitatively
understood on a much more basic level of theory, just by considering the
crystal-electric-field scheme of a pair of rare-earth ions in the lattice,
coupled by a single nearest-neighbor exchange interaction. Transitions between
different crystal-field ground states, calculated using this minimal model for
the parent compound CeB6, possess field-directional anisotropy that strikingly
resembles the experimental phase diagrams. This implies that the anisotropy of
phase transitions is of local origin and is easier to describe than the ordered
phases themselves.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev. B; v2: minor typographic correction
Pseudo-Goldstone magnons in the frustrated S=3/2 Heisenberg helimagnet ZnCr2Se4 with a pyrochlore magnetic sublattice
Low-energy spin excitations in any long-range ordered magnetic system in the
absence of magnetocrystalline anisotropy are gapless Goldstone modes emanating
from the ordering wave vectors. In helimagnets, these modes hybridize into the
so-called helimagnon excitations. Here we employ neutron spectroscopy supported
by theoretical calculations to investigate the magnetic excitation spectrum of
the isotropic Heisenberg helimagnet ZnCr2Se4 with a cubic spinel structure, in
which spin-3/2 magnetic Cr3+ ions are arranged in a geometrically frustrated
pyrochlore sublattice. Apart from the conventional Goldstone mode emanating
from the (0 0 q) ordering vector, low-energy magnetic excitations in the
single-domain proper-screw spiral phase show soft helimagnon modes with a small
energy gap of ~0.17 meV, emerging from two orthogonal wave vectors (q 0 0) and
(0 q 0) where no magnetic Bragg peaks are present. We term them
pseudo-Goldstone magnons, as they appear gapless within linear spin-wave theory
and only acquire a finite gap due to higher-order quantum-fluctuation
corrections. Our results are likely universal for a broad class of symmetric
helimagnets, opening up a new way of studying weak magnon-magnon interactions
with accessible spectroscopic methods.Comment: V3: Final version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Adherence of the rotating vortex lattice in the noncentrosymmetric superconductor RuB to the London model
The noncentrosymmetric superconductor RB has in previous studies demonstrated remarkably unusual behaviour in its vortex lattice (VL), where the nearest neighbour directions of the vortices dissociate from the crystal lattice and instead show a complex field-history dependence, and the VL rotates as the field is changed. In this study, we look at the VL form factor of RuB during this field-history dependence, to check for deviations from established models, such as the London model. We find that the data is well described by the anisotropic London model, which is in accordance with theoretical predictions that the alterations to the structure of the vortices due to broken inversion symmetry should be small. From this, we also extract values for the penetration depth and coherence length
Adherence of the rotating vortex lattice in the noncentrosymmetric superconductor RuB to the London model
The noncentrosymmetric superconductor RuB has in previous studies
demonstrated remarkably unusual behaviour in its vortex lattice, where the
nearest neighbour directions of the vortices dissociate from the crystal
lattice and instead show a complex field-history dependence, and the vortex
lattice rotates as the field is changed. In this study, we look at the vortex
lattice form factor of RuB during this field-history dependence, to
check for deviations from established models, such as the London model. We find
that the data is well described by the anisotropic London model, which is in
accordance with theoretical predictions that the alterations to the structure
of the vortices due to broken inversion symmetry should be small. From this, we
also extract values for the penetration depth and coherence length