291 research outputs found
Valence modulations in CeRuSn
CeRuSn exhibits an extraordinary room temperature structure at 300~K with
coexistence of two types of Ce ions, namely trivalent Ce and
intermediate valent Ce, in a metallic environment. The ordered
arrangement of these two Ce types on specific crystallographic sites results in
a doubling of the unit cell along the -axis with respect to the basic
monoclinic CeCoAl-type structure. Below room temperature, structural modulation
transitions with very broad hysteresis have been reported from measurements of
various bulk properties. X-ray diffraction revealed that at low temperatures
the doubling of the CeCoAl type structure is replaced by a different modulated
ground state, approximating a near tripling of the basic CeCoAl cell. The
transition is accompanied by a significant contraction of the axis. We
present new x-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy data at the Ce L
absorption edge, measured on a freshly cleaved surface of a CeRuSn single
crystal. In contrast to a previous report, the new data exhibit small but
significant variations as function of temperature that are consistent with a
transition of a fraction of Ce ions to the intermediate valence state,
analogous to the transition in elemental cerium,
when cooling through the structural transitions of CeRuSn. Such results in a
valence-modulated state
YbPtPb: Magnetic frustration in the Shastry-Sutherland lattice
We have synthesized single crystals of YbPtPb, which crystallize
in the layered UPtSn-type structure, where planes of Yb ions lie on
a triangular network. We report here the first results of magnetization,
specific heat, and electrical resistivity experiments. The lattice constants
and high temperature magnetic susceptibility indicate that the Yb ions are
trivalent, while Schottky peaks in the specific heat show that the ground state
is a well isolated doublet. Significant magnetic anisotropy is observed, with
the ratio of susceptibilities perpendicular and parallel to the magnetic planes
differing by as much as a factor of 30 at the lowest temperatures.
Antiferromagnetic order occurs at a N\'eel temperature =2.07 K, a
transition temperature which is more than an order of magnitude smaller than
the mean field interactions reflected by the in-plane Weiss temperature.
Further evidence for short ranged magnetic fluctuations is found in the
magnetic susceptibility and electrical resistivity, which have broad peaks
above , and in the slow development of the magnetic entropy at
. Our experiments indicate that YbPtPb is a quasi-two
dimensional and localized moment system, where strong magnetic frustration may
arise from the geometry of the underlying Shastry-Sutherland lattice.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Magnetoresistance, specific heat and magnetocaloric effect of equiatomic rare-earth transition-metal magnesium compounds
We present a study of the magnetoresistance, the specific heat and the
magnetocaloric effect of equiatomic Mg intermetallics with , Eu, Gd, Yb and , Au and of GdAuIn. Depending on the
composition these compounds are paramagnetic (, Yb) or they
order either ferro- or antiferromagnetically with transition temperatures
ranging from about 13 to 81 K. All of them are metallic, but the resistivity
varies over 3 orders of magnitude. The magnetic order causes a strong decrease
of the resistivity and around the ordering temperature we find pronounced
magnetoresistance effects. The magnetic ordering also leads to well-defined
anomalies in the specific heat. An analysis of the entropy change leads to the
conclusions that generally the magnetic transition can be described by an
ordering of localized moments arising from the half-filled
shells of Eu or Gd. However, for GdAgMg we find clear evidence
for two phase transitions indicating that the magnetic ordering sets in
partially below about 125 K and is completed via an almost first-order
transition at 39 K. The magnetocaloric effect is weak for the antiferromagnets
and rather pronounced for the ferromagnets for low magnetic fields around the
zero-field Curie temperature.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures include
Antiferromagnetic ordering in heavy fermion system Ce2Au2Cd
La2Au2Cd and Ce2Au2Cd were prepared from the elements by reactions in sealed
tantalum tubes in a water-cooled sample chamber of an induction furnace. These
intermetallics crystallize with the tetragonal Mo2FeB2 type, space group
P4/mbm. While La2Au2Cd is Pauli paramagnetic, Ce2Au2Cd shows Curie-Weiss
behaviour above 100 K with an experimental magnetic moment of 2.41(2) muB/Ce
atom, indicating trivalent cerium. Antiferromagnetic ordering is detected for
Ce2Au2Cd at 5.01(2) K and magnetization measurements reveal a metamagnetic
transition at 3 K at a critical field of around 20 kOe with a saturation moment
of 1.50(2)muB/Ce atom at 80 kOe. The low-temperature heat capacity properties
characterize Ce2Au2Cd as a heavy fermion material with an electronic specific
heat coefficient (gamma) = 807(5) mJ/mol K2 as compared to La2Au2Cd with gamma
= 6(5) mJ/mol K2.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Searching for hexagonal analogues of the half-metallic half-Heusler XYZ compounds
The XYZ half-Heusler crystal structure can conveniently be described as a
tetrahedral zinc blende YZ structure which is stuffed by a slightly ionic X
species. This description is well suited to understand the electronic structure
of semiconducting 8-electron compounds such as LiAlSi (formulated
Li[AlSi]) or semiconducting 18-electron compounds such as TiCoSb
(formulated Ti[CoSb]). The basis for this is that [AlSi]
(with the same electron count as Si) and [CoSb] (the same electron
count as GaSb), are both structurally and electronically, zinc-blende
semiconductors. The electronic structure of half-metallic ferromagnets in this
structure type can then be described as semiconductors with stuffing magnetic
ions which have a local moment: For example, 22 electron MnNiSb can be written
Mn[NiSb]. The tendency in the 18 electron compound for a
semiconducting gap -- believed to arise from strong covalency -- is carried
over in MnNiSb to a tendency for a gap in one spin direction. Here we similarly
propose the systematic examination of 18-electron hexagonal compounds for
semiconducting gaps; these would be the "stuffed wurtzite" analogues of the
"stuffed zinc blende" half-Heusler compounds. These semiconductors could then
serve as the basis for possibly new families of half-metallic compounds,
attained through appropriate replacement of non-magnetic ions by magnetic ones.
These semiconductors and semimetals with tunable charge carrier concentrations
could also be interesting in the context of magnetoresistive and thermoelectric
materials.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, of which 4 are colou
Magnetic behaviour of Eu_2CuSi_3: Large negative magnetoresistance above Curie temperature
We report here the results of magnetic susceptibility,
electrical-resistivity, magnetoresistance (MR), heat-capacity and ^{151}Eu
Mossbauer effect measurements on the compound, Eu_2CuSi_3, crystallizing in an
AlB_2-derived hexagonal structure. The results establish that Eu ions are
divalent, undergoing long-range ferromagnetic-ordering below (T_C=) 37 K. An
interesting observation is that the sign of MR is negative even at temperatures
close to 3T_C, with increasing magnitude with decreasing temperature exhibiting
a peak at T_C. This observation, being made for a Cu containing magnetic
rare-earth compound for the first time, is of relevance to the field of
collosal magnetoresistance.Comment: To appear in PRB, RevTex, 4 pages text + 6 psFigs. Related to our
earlier work on Gd systems (see cond-mat/9811382, cond-mat/9811387,
cond-mat/9812069, cond-mat/9812365
Complex charge ordering in CeRuSn
At ambient temperatures, CeRuSn exhibits an extraordinary structure with a coexistence of two types of Ce ions in a metallic environment, namely trivalent Ce3 and intermediate valent Ce 4 amp; 8722; amp; 948; . Charge ordering produces a doubling of the unit cell along the c axis with respect to the basic monoclinic CeCoAl type structure. Below room temperature, a phase transition with very broad hysteresis has been observed in various bulk properties like electrical resistivity, magnetic susceptibility, and specific heat. The present x ray diffraction results show that at low temperatures the doubling of the CeCoAl type structure is replaced by an ill defined modulated ground state. In this state, at least three different modulation periods compete, with the dominant mode close to a tripling of the basic cell. The transition is accompanied by a significant contraction of the c axis. XANES data suggest that the average Ce valence remains constant; thus the observed c axis contraction is not due to any valence transition. We propose a qualitative structure model with modified stacking sequences of Ce3 and Ce 4 amp; 8722; amp; 948; layers in the various modulated phases. Surprisingly, far below 100 K, the modulated state is sensitive to x ray irradiation at photon fluxes available at a synchrotron. With photon fluxes of order 1012 s amp; 8722;1, the modulated ground state can be destroyed on a time scale of minutes and the doubling of the CeCoAl cell observed at room temperature is recovered. The final state is metastable at 10 K. Heating the sample above 60 K again leads to a recovery of the modulated state. Thus CeRuSn exhibits both thermally and x ray induced reversible transformations of the Ce3 Ce 4 amp; 8722; amp; 948; charge ordering pattern. Such a behavior is unique among any known intermetallic compoun
Thermal expansion of the magnetically ordering intermetallics RTMg (R = Eu, Gd and T = Ag, Au)
We report measurements of the thermal expansion for two Eu- and two
Gd-based intermetallics which exhibit ferro- or antiferromagnetic phase
transitions. These materials show sharp positive (EuAgMg and GdAuMg) and
negative (EuAuMg and GdAgMg) peaks in the temperature dependence of the thermal
expansion coefficient which become smeared and/or displaced in an
external magnetic field. Together with specific heat data we determine the
initial pressure dependences of the transition temperatures at ambient pressure
using the Ehrenfest or Clausius-Clapeyron relation. We find large pressure
dependences indicating strong spin-phonon coupling, in particular for GdAgMg
and EuAuMg where a quantum phase transition might be reached at moderate
pressures of a few GPa.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
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