868 research outputs found
Spin gaps and magnetic structure of NaxCoO2
We present two experiments that provide information on spin anisotropy and
the magnetic structure of NaxCoO2. First, we report low-energy neutron
inelastic scattering measurements of the zone-center magnetic excitations in
the magnetically ordered phase of Na0.75CoO2. The energy spectra suggest the
existence of two gaps, and are very well fitted by a spin-wave model with both
in-plane and out-of-plane anisotropy terms. The gap energies decrease with
increasing temperature and both gaps are found to have closed when the
temperature exceeds the magnetic ordering temperature T_m~22 K. Secondly, we
present neutron diffraction studies of Na0.85CoO2 with a magnetic field applied
approximately parallel to the c axis. For fields in excess of ~8T a magnetic
Bragg peak was observed at the (0,0,3) position in reciprocal space. We
interpret this as a spin-flop transition of the A-type antiferromagnetic
structure, and we show that the spin-flop field is consistent with the size of
the anisotropy gap.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Absence of strong magnetic fluctuations in the iron phosphide superconductors LaFePO and Sr2ScO3FeP
We report neutron inelastic scattering measurements on polycrystalline LaFePO
and Sr2ScO3FeP, two members of the iron phosphide families of superconductors.
No evidence is found for any magnetic fluctuations in the spectrum of either
material in the energy and wavevector ranges probed. Special attention is paid
to the wavevector at which spin-density-wave-like fluctuations are seen in
other iron-based superconductors. We estimate that the magnetic signal, if
present, is at least a factor of four (Sr2ScO3FeP) or seven (LaFePO) smaller
than in the related iron arsenide and chalcogenide superconductors. These
results suggest that magnetic fluctuations are not as influential on the
electronic properties of the iron phosphide systems as they are in other
iron-based superconductors.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Spin resonance in the superconducting state of LiFeODFeSe observed by neutron spectroscopy
We have performed inelastic neutron scattering measurements on a powder
sample of the superconductor lithium iron selenide hydroxide
LiFeODFeSe (, \,K). The spectrum shows an enhanced intensity below over an
energy range , where is the
superconducting gap, with maxima at the wave vectors \,\AA and \,\AA. The behavior of this
feature is consistent with the spin resonance mode found in other
unconventional superconductors, and strongly resembles the spin resonance
observed in the spectrum of the molecular-intercalated iron selenide,
Li(ND)(ND)FeSe. The signal can
be described with a characteristic two-dimensional wave vector
in the Brillouin zone of the iron square lattice, consistent with the nesting
vector between electron Fermi sheets
Experimental Proof of a Magnetic Coulomb Phase
Spin ice materials are magnetic substances in which the spin directions map
onto hydrogen positions in water ice. Recently this analogy has been elevated
to an electromagnetic equivalence, indicating that the spin ice state is a
Coulomb phase, with magnetic monopole excitations analogous to ice's mobile
ionic defects. No Coulomb phase has yet been proved in a real magnetic
material, as the key experimental signature is difficult to resolve in most
systems. Here we measure the scattering of polarised neutrons from the
prototypical spin ice Ho2Ti2O7. This enables us to separate different
contributions to the magnetic correlations to clearly demonstrate the existence
of an almost perfect Coulomb phase in this material. The temperature dependence
of the scattering is consistent with the existence of deconfined magnetic
monopoles connected by Dirac strings of divergent length.Comment: 18 pages, 4 fig
The importance of XY anisotropy in Sr2IrO4 revealed by magnetic critical scattering experiments
The magnetic critical scattering in SrIrO has been characterized
using X-ray resonant magnetic scattering (XRMS) both below and above the 3D
antiferromagnetic ordering temperature, T. The order parameter
critical exponent below T is found to be \beta=0.195(4), in the
range of the 2D XYh universality class. Over an extended temperature range
above T, the amplitude and correlation length of the intrinsic
critical fluctuations are well described by the 2D Heisenberg model with XY
anisotropy. This contrasts with an earlier study of the critical scattering
over a more limited range of temperature which found agreement with the theory
of the isotropic 2D Heisenberg quantum antiferromagnet, developed to describe
the critical fluctuations of the conventional Mott insulator LaCuO and
related systems. Our study therefore establishes the importance of XY
anisotropy in the low-energy effective Hamiltonian of SrIrO, the
prototypical spin-orbit Mott insulator.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Influence of static Jahn-Teller distortion on the magnetic excitation spectrum of PrO2: A synchrotron x-ray and neutron inelastic scattering study
A synchrotron x-ray diffraction study of the crystallographic structure of
PrO2 in the Jahn-Teller distorted phase is reported. The distortion of the
oxygen sublattice, which was previously ambiguous, is shown to be a chiral
structure in which neighbouring oxygen chains have opposite chiralities. A
temperature dependent study of the magnetic excitation spectrum, probed by
neutron inelastic scattering, is also reported. Changes in the energies and
relative intensities of the crystal field transitions provide an insight into
the interplay between the static and dynamic Jahn-Teller effects.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
The Magnetic Structure of DyMn2O5 Determined by Resonant X-ray Scattering
Resonant magnetic x-ray scattering has been used to investigate the magnetic
structure of the magnetoelectric multiferroic DyMn2O5. We have studied the
magnetic structure in the ferroelectric phase of this material, which displays
the strongest ferroelectric polarisation and magnetodielectric effect of the
RMn2O5 (where R is a rare earth ion, Y or Bi) family. The magnetic structure
observed is similar to that of the other members of the series, but differs in
the direction of the ordered moments. In DyMn2O5 both the Dy and Mn moments lie
close to the b-axis, whereas in other RMn2O5 they lie close to the a-axis.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
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