258 research outputs found
Detailed crystallographic analysis of the ice V to ice XIII hydrogen-ordering phase transition
Ice V is a structurally highly complex material with 28 water molecules in its monoclinic unit cell. It is classified as a hydrogen-disordered phase of ice. Yet, some of its hydrogen-bonded water molecules display significant orientational order. Upon cooling pure ice V, additional orientational ordering cannot be achieved on the experimental time scale. Doping with hydrochloric acid has been shown to be most effective in enabling the phase transition of ice V to its hydrogen-ordered counterpart ice XIII. Here, we present a detailed crystallographic study of this phase transition investigating the effects of hydrochloric and hydrofluoric acid as well as lithium and potassium hydroxide doping. The magnitudes of the stepwise changes in the lattice constants during the phase transition are found to be more sensitive indicators for the extent of hydrogen order in ice XIII than the appearance of new Bragg peaks. Hydrofluoric acid and lithium hydroxide doping enable similar ordering processes as hydrochloric acid but with slower kinetics. The various possible space groups and ordered configurations of ice XIII are examined systematically, and the previously determined P21/a structure is confirmed. Interestingly, the partial hydrogen order already present in ice V is found to perpetuate into ice XIII, and these ordering processes are found to be independent of pressure. Overall, the hydrogen ordering goes along with a small increase in volume, which appears to be the origin of the slower hydrogen-ordering kinetics under pressure. Heating pressure-quenched samples at ambient pressure revealed low-temperature "transient ordering" features in both diffraction and calorimetry
Atomic-scale images of charge ordering in a mixed-valence manganite
Transition-metal perovskite oxides exhibit a wide range of extraordinary but
imperfectly understood phenomena. Charge, spin, orbital, and lattice degrees of
freedom all undergo order-disorder transitions in regimes not far from where
the best-known of these phenomena, namely high-temperature superconductivity of
the copper oxides, and the 'colossal' magnetoresistance of the manganese
oxides, occur. Mostly diffraction techniques, sensitive either to the spin or
the ionic core, have been used to measure the order. Unfortunately, because
they are only weakly sensitive to valence electrons and yield superposition of
signals from distinct mesoscopic phases, they cannot directly image mesoscopic
phase coexistence and charge ordering, two key features of the manganites. Here
we describe the first experiment to image charge ordering and phase separation
in real space with atomic-scale resolution in a transition metal oxide. Our
scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) data show that charge order is correlated
with structural order, as well as with whether the material is locally metallic
or insulating, thus giving an atomic-scale basis for descriptions of the
manganites as mixtures of electronically and structurally distinct phases.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 19 reference
MnSb2O6: a polar magnet with a chiral crystal structure
Structural and magnetic chiralities are found to coexist in a small group of materials in which they produce intriguing phenomenologies such as the recently discovered Skyrmion phases. Here, we describe a previously unknown manifestation of this interplay in MnSb2O6, a trigonal oxide with a chiral crystal structure. Unlike all other known cases, the MnSb2O6 magnetic structure is based on corotating cycloids rather than helices. The coupling to the structural chirality is provided by a magnetic axial vector, related to the so-called vector chirality. We show that this unique arrangement is the magnetic ground state of the symmetric-exchange Hamiltonian, based on ab initio theoretical calculations of the Heisenberg exchange interactions, and is stabilized by out-of-plane anisotropy. MnSb2O6 is predicted to be multiferroic with a unique ferroelectric switching mechanism.open4
Charge ordered ferromagnetic phase in La0.5Ca0.5MnO3
Mixed valent manganites are noted for their unusual magnetic,electronic and
structural phase transitions. The La1-xCaxMnO3 phase diagram shows that below
transition temperatures in the range 100-260 K, compounds with 0.2 < x < 0.5
are ferromagnetic and metallic whereas those with 0.5 < x < 0.9 are
antiferromagnetic and charge ordered. In a narrow region around x = 0.5, these
totally dissimilar states are thought to coexist. Uehara et al. have shown that
charge order and charge disorder can coexist in the related compound
La0.25Pr0.375Ca0.375MnO3. Here, we present electron microscopy data for
La0.5Ca0.5MnO3 that sheds light on the distribution of coexisting phases and
uncovers a novel and unexpected phase. Using electron holography and Fresnel
imaging, we find micron sized ferromagnetic regions spanning several grains
coexisting with similar sized regions with no local magnetisation. Holography
shows that the ferromagnetic regions have a local magnetisation of 3.4 +- 0.2
mB/Mn (the spin aligned value is 3.5 mB/Mn). We use electron diffraction and
dark field imaging to show that charge order exists in regions with no net
magnetisation and, surprisingly, can also occur in ferromagnetic regions.Comment: 5 pages of pdf with 2 figures include
Crystallographic, Optical, and Electronic Properties of the Cs2AgBi1–xInxBr6 Double Perovskite: Understanding the Fundamental Photovoltaic Efficiency Challenges
We present a crystallographic and optoelectronic study of the double perovskite Cs2AgBi1–xInxBr6. From structural characterization we determine that the indium cation shrinks the lattice and shifts the cubic-to-tetragonal phase transition point to lower temperatures. The absorption onset is shifted to shorter wavelengths upon increasing the indium content, leading to wider band gaps, which we rationalize through first-principles band structure calculations. Despite the unfavorable band gap shift, we observe an enhancement in the steady-state photoluminescence intensity, and n-i-p photovoltaic devices present short-circuit current greater than that of neat Cs2AgBiBr6 devices. In order to evaluate the prospects of this material as a solar absorber, we combine accurate absorption measurements with thermodynamic modeling and identify the fundamental limitations of this system. Provided radiative efficiency can be increased and the choice of charge extraction layers are specifically improved, this material could prove to be a useful wide band gap solar absorber
Spin-lattice instability to a fractional magnetization state in the spinel HgCr2O4
Magnetic systems are fertile ground for the emergence of exotic states when
the magnetic interactions cannot be satisfied simultaneously due to the
topology of the lattice - a situation known as geometrical frustration.
Spinels, AB2O4, can realize the most highly frustrated network of
corner-sharing tetrahedra. Several novel states have been discovered in
spinels, such as composite spin clusters and novel charge-ordered states. Here
we use neutron and synchrotron X-ray scattering to characterize the fractional
magnetization state of HgCr2O4 under an external magnetic field, H. When the
field is applied in its Neel ground state, a phase transition occurs at H ~ 10
Tesla at which each tetrahedron changes from a canted Neel state to a
fractional spin state with the total spin, Stet, of S/2 and the lattice
undergoes orthorhombic to cubic symmetry change. Our results provide the
microscopic one-to-one correspondence between the spin state and the lattice
distortion
X-ray imaging and multiferroic coupling of cycloidal magnetic domains in ferroelectric monodomain BiFeO3
Magnetic domains at the surface of a ferroelectric monodomain BiFeO3 single crystal have been imaged by hard x-ray magnetic scattering. Magnetic domains up to several hundred microns in size have been observed, corresponding to cycloidal modulations of the magnetization along the wave vector k=(??,??,0) and symmetry equivalent directions. The rotation direction of the magnetization in all magnetic domains, determined by diffraction of circularly polarized light, was found to be unique and in agreement with predictions of a combined approach based on a spin-model complemented by relativistic density-functional simulations. Imaging of the surface shows that the largest adjacent domains display a 120?? vortex structure.close231
Microscopic annealing process and its impact on superconductivity in T'-structure electron-doped copper oxides
High-transition-temperature superconductivity arises in copper oxides when
holes or electrons are doped into the CuO2 planes of their insulating parent
compounds. While hole-doping quickly induces metallic behavior and
superconductivity in many cuprates, electron-doping alone is insufficient in
materials such as R2CuO4 (R is Nd, Pr, La, Ce, etc.), where it is necessary to
anneal an as-grown sample in a low-oxygen environment to remove a tiny amount
of oxygen in order to induce superconductivity. Here we show that the
microscopic process of oxygen reduction repairs Cu deficiencies in the as-grown
materials and creates oxygen vacancies in the stoichiometric CuO2 planes,
effectively reducing disorder and providing itinerant carriers for
superconductivity. The resolution of this long-standing materials issue
suggests that the fundamental mechanism for superconductivity is the same for
electron- and hole-doped copper oxides.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Nature Material
Enhanced Microwave Absorption Properties of Intrinsically Core/shell Structured La0.6Sr0.4MnO3Nanoparticles
The intrinsically core/shell structured La0.6Sr0.4MnO3nanoparticles with amorphous shells and ferromagnetic cores have been prepared. The magnetic, dielectric and microwave absorption properties are investigated in the frequency range from 1 to 12 GHz. An optimal reflection loss of −41.1 dB is reached at 8.2 GHz with a matching thickness of 2.2 mm, the bandwidth with a reflection loss less than −10 dB is obtained in the 5.5–11.3 GHz range for absorber thicknesses of 1.5–2.5 mm. The excellent microwave absorption properties are a consequence of the better electromagnetic matching due to the existence of the protective amorphous shells, the ferromagnetic cores, as well as the particular core/shell microstructure. As a result, the La0.6Sr0.4MnO3nanoparticles with amorphous shells and ferromagnetic cores may become attractive candidates for the new types of electromagnetic wave absorption materials
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