349 research outputs found
Chiral skyrmions in thin magnetic films: new objects for magnetic storage technologies?
Axisymmetric magnetic lines of nanometer sizes (chiral vortices or skyrmions)
have been predicted to exist in a large group of noncentrosymmetric crystals
more than two decades ago. Recently these magnetic textures have been directly
observed in nanolayers of cubic helimagnets and monolayers of magnetic metals.
We develop a micromagnetic theory of chiral skyrmions in thin magnetic layers
for magnetic materials with intrinsic and induced chirality. Such particle-like
and stable micromagnetic objects can exist in broad ranges of applied magnetic
fields including zero field. Chiral skyrmions can be used as a new type of
highly mobile nanoscale data carriers
First-order structural transition in the magnetically ordered phase of Fe1.13Te
Specific heat, resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, linear thermal expansion
(LTE), and high-resolution synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction investigations
of single crystals Fe1+yTe (0.06 < y < 0.15) reveal a splitting of a single,
first-order transition for y 0.12. Most
strikingly, all measurements on identical samples Fe1.13Te consistently
indicate that, upon cooling, the magnetic transition at T_N precedes the
first-order structural transition at a lower temperature T_s. The structural
transition in turn coincides with a change in the character of the magnetic
structure. The LTE measurements along the crystallographic c-axis displays a
small distortion close to T_N due to a lattice striction as a consequence of
magnetic ordering, and a much larger change at T_s. The lattice symmetry
changes, however, only below T_s as indicated by powder X-ray diffraction. This
behavior is in stark contrast to the sequence in which the phase transitions
occur in Fe pnictides.Comment: 6 page
Hybridization gap and Fano resonance in SmB
We present results of Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Spectroscopy (STS)
measurements on the "Kondo insulator" SmB. The vast majority of surface
areas investigated was reconstructed but, infrequently, also patches of varying
size of non-reconstructed, Sm- or B-terminated surfaces were found. On the
smallest patches, clear indications for the hybridization gap and
inter-multiplet transitions were observed. On non-reconstructed surface areas
large enough for coherent co-tunneling we were able to observe clear-cut Fano
resonances. Our locally resolved STS indicated considerable finite conductance
on all surfaces independent of their structure.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Disorder-driven electronic localization and phase separation in superconducting Fe1+yTe0.5Se0.5 single crystals
We have investigated the influence of Fe-excess on the electrical transport
and magnetism of Fe1+yTe0.5Se0.5 (y=0.04 and 0.09) single crystals. Both
compositions exhibit resistively determined superconducting transitions (Tc)
with an onset temperature of about 15 K. From the width of the superconducting
transition and the magnitude of the lower critical field Hc1, it is inferred
that excess of Fe suppresses superconductivity. The linear and non-linear
responses of the ac-susceptibility show that the superconducting state for
these compositions is inhomogeneous. A possible origin of this phase separation
is a magnetic coupling between Fe-excess occupying interstitial sites in the
chalcogen planes and those in the Fe-square lattice. The temperature derivative
of the resistivity drho/dT in the temperature range Tc < T < Ta with Ta being
the temperature of a magnetic anomaly, changes from positive to negative with
increasing Fe. A log 1/T divergence of the resistivity above Tc in the sample
with higher amount of Fe suggests a disorder driven electronic localization.Comment: 7 page
Large Noncollinearity and Spin Reorientation in the Novel Mn2RhSn Heusler Magnet
Noncollinear magnets provide essential ingredients for the next generation
memory technology. It is a new prospect for the Heusler materials, already well
known due to the diverse range of other fundamental characteristics. Here, we
present a combined experimental and theoretical study of novel noncollinear
tetragonal Mn2RhSn Heusler material exhibiting unusually strong canting of its
magnetic sublattices. It undergoes a spin-reorientation transition, induced by
a temperature change and suppressed by an external magnetic field. Because of
the presence of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya exchange and magnetic anisotropy, Mn2RhSn
is suggested to be a promising candidate for realizing the Skyrmion state in
the Heusler family
Tree-ring analysis elucidating palaeo-environmental effects captured in an in situ fossil forest – The last 80 years within an early Permian ecosystem
© 2017 Elsevier B.V. The early Permian Chemnitz Fossil L agerstätte (Leukersdorf Formation, Chemnitz Basin, SE Germany) represents a diverse T 0 assemblage of a fossil forest ecosystem around the Sakmarian-Artinskian transition (290.6 ± 1.8 Ma), which was preserved by pyroclastic deposits of a multi-phased volcanic eruption. The multi-aged plant community consists of predominantly hygrophilous elements, which grew on an alluvial plain mineral substrate under sub-humid conditions, representing a wet spot environment. Strong seasonality triggered the formation of annual tree rings in arborescent woody plants, such as pycnoxylic gymnosperms, medullosan seed ferns and calamitaleans. From several hundred fossil trees, the 53 best-preserved specimens were selected and investigated in detail by measuring 2,081 tree rings in individual sequences of up to 77 rings. Ring sequences were analysed by standard dendrochronological methods to determine both annual growth rates and mean sensitivity. Morphological and statistical analyses on single tree rings reveal different tree-ring types according to the different plant groups. Pycnoxylic gymnosperms have distinct and regular tree rings, whereas medullosan seed ferns and calamitaleans show indistinct and regular tree rings as well as so called event rings. Results reveal differences between plant groups regarding their physiological reactions or adaptations to seasonal fluctuations. In comparison to pycnoxylic gymnosperms, both medullosan seed ferns and calamitaleans exhibit reduced growth rates and more sensitive reaction to environmental perturbances as water deficiency pointing to comparably lower adaptation to seasonally dry palaeoclimate. In this context, event rings are in many cases traced back to plant physiological stress during particularly severe drought periods. Altogether, these fossil trees serve as sensitive environmental archives, which shed light on growth conditions several decades back in time from the entombing eruption
Palaeoclimatic and site-specific conditions in the early Permian fossil forest of Chemnitz-Sedimentological, geochemical and palaeobotanical evidence
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. As significant indicators of deep-time palaeoclimate, a number of new palaeontological, pedological and geochemical characteristics are provided for the Chemnitz Fossil Lagerstätte to depict more precisely its environmental conditions. For the first time, several lines of evidence indicate that this fossil forest, instantaneously preserved by volcanic deposits, once received an annual precipitation of around 800-1100 mm, but grew on a nearly unweathered palaeosol. Although the composition of this rich and diverse T0 assemblage suggests a hygrophilous, dense and multi-aged vegetation dominated by conservative lineages, the habitat was affected by environmental disturbances and pronounced seasonality. Repeated changes in local moisture availability are suggested by geochemical proxies, the co-occurrence to intergrowth of calcic and ferric glaebules in the palaeosol and developmental traits of perennial vegetational elements. Specific substrate adaptation is reflected by different root systems and cyclic growth interruptions recorded in the stems, branches and roots of long-lived woody plants. Many differentially adapted terrestrial animals complete the more comprehensive reconstruction of a late Sakmarian ecosystem and its climatic and preservational controls. Albeit spatially confined, this diverse in-situ record may contribute to understand wetland-dryland dynamics of sub-tropical Northern Hemisphere Pangaea
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Mesoscale Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction: Geometrical tailoring of the magnetochirality
Crystals with broken inversion symmetry can host fundamentally appealing and technologically relevant periodical or localized chiral magnetic textures. The type of the texture as well as its magnetochiral properties are determined by the intrinsic Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI), which is a material property and can hardly be changed. Here we put forth a method to create new artificial chiral nanoscale objects with tunable magnetochiral properties from standard magnetic materials by using geometrical manipulations. We introduce a mesoscale Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction that combines the intrinsic spin-orbit and extrinsic curvature-driven DMI terms and depends both on the material and geometrical parameters. The vector of the mesoscale DMI determines magnetochiral properties of any curved magnetic system with broken inversion symmetry. The strength and orientation of this vector can be changed by properly choosing the geometry. For a specific example of nanosized magnetic helix, the same material system with different geometrical parameters can acquire one of three zero-temperature magnetic phases, namely, phase with a quasitangential magnetization state, phase with a periodical state and one intermediate phase with a periodical domain wall state. Our approach paves the way towards the realization of a new class of nanoscale spintronic and spinorbitronic devices with the geometrically tunable magnetochirality
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