270 research outputs found
Effect of Sr substitution on superconductivity in Hg2(Ba1-ySry)2YCu2O8-d (part2): bond valence sum approach of the hole distribution
The effects of Sr substitution on superconductivity, and more particulary the
changes induced in the hole doping mechanism, were investigated in
Hg2(Ba1-ySry)2YCu2O8-d by a "bond valence sum" analysis with Sr content from y
= 0.0 to y = 1.0. A comparison with CuBa2YCu2O7-d and Cu2Ba2YCu2O8 systems
suggests a possible explanation of the Tc enhancement from 0 K for y = 0.0 to
42 K for y = 1.0. The charge distribution among atoms of the unit cell was
determined from the refined structure, for y = 0.0 to 1.0. It shows a charge
transfer to the superconducting CuO2 plane via two doping channels pi(1) and
pi(2), i.e. through O2(apical)-Cu and Ba/Sr-O1 bonds respectively.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Journal of Physics:
Condensed Matte
Temperature and field dependence of the phase separation, structure, and magnetic ordering in LaCaMnO, (, 0.50, and 0.53)
Neutron powder diffraction measurements, combined with magnetization and
resistivity data, have been carried out in the doped perovskite
LaCaMnO (, 0.50, and 0.53) to elucidate the structural,
magnetic, and electronic properties of the system around the composition
corresponding to an equal number of Mn3+ and Mn4+. At room temperature all
three samples are paramagnetic and single phase, with crystallographic symmetry
Pnma. The samples then all become ferromagnetic (FM) at K. At
K, however, a second distinct crystallographic phase (denoted A-II)
begins to form. Initially the intrinsic widths of the peaks are quite large,
but they narrow as the temperature decreases and the phase fraction increases,
indicating microscopic coexistence. The fraction of the sample that exhibits
the A-II phase increases with decreasing temperature and also increases with
increasing Ca doping, but the transition never goes to completion to the lowest
temperatures measured (5 K) and the two phases therefore coexist in this
temperature-composition regime. Phase A-II orders antiferromagnetically (AFM)
below a N\'{e}el temperature K, with the CE-type magnetic
structure. Resistivity measurements show that this phase is a conductor, while
the CE phase is insulating. Application of magnetic fields up to 9 T
progressively inhibits the formation of the A-II phase, but this suppression is
path dependent, being much stronger for example if the sample is field-cooled
compared to zero-field cooling and then applying the field. The H-T phase
diagram obtained from the diffraction measurements is in good agreement with
the results of magnetization and resistivity.Comment: 12 pages, 3 tables, 11 figure
High Performances Corrugated Feed Horns for Space Applications at Millimetre Wavelengths
We report on the design, fabrication and testing of a set of high performance
corrugated feed horns at 30 GHz, 70 GHz and 100 GHz, built as advanced
prototypes for the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) of the ESA Planck mission.
The electromagnetic designs include linear (100 GHz) and dual shaped (30 and 70
GHz) profiles. Fabrication has been achieved by direct machining at 30 GHz, and
by electro-formation at higher frequencies. The measured performances on side
lobes and return loss meet the stringent Planck requirements over the large
(20%) instrument bandwidth. Moreover, the advantage in terms of main lobe shape
and side lobes levels of the dual profiled designs has been demonstrated.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Experimental
Astronom
Nature of Electron Order in LaSrMnO
Synchrotron x-ray scattering measurements of the low-temperature structure of
the single-layer manganese oxide LaSrMnO, over the doping
range , indicate the existence of three distinct regions:
a disordered phase (), a charge-ordered phase (), and a
mixed phase (, the modulation vector associated
with the charge order is incommensurate with the lattice and depends linearly
on the concentration of electrons. The primary superlattice reflections
are strongly suppressed along the modulation direction and the higher harmonics
are weak, implying the existence of a largely transverse and nearly sinusoidal
structural distortion, consistent with a charge density wave of the
electrons.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Crystal and magnetic structure of the LaCaMnO compound
We studied the crystal and magnetic structure of the
LaCaMnO compound for and . At T=300 K both
samples are paramagnetic with crystallographic symmetry . At low
temperatures they undergo a monoclinic distortion from orthorhombic -type
structure with to a monoclinic
structure with (,
) and space group below . The
onset of the structural transformation coincides with the development of the
-type long range antiferromagnetic order with propagation vector . The monoclinic unit cell allowed us to determine the
direction of the Mn magnetic moment with respect to the crystallographic axes:
it is perpendicular to the propagation vector, . The amplitude of the ordered magnetic moment at K
is found to be and for and 0.85,
respectively.Comment: In press (Phys. Rev B 01 Feb 2002
Charge and orbital order in half-doped manganites
An explanation is given for the charge order, orbital order and insulating
state observed in half-doped manganese oxides, such as
NdSrMnO. The competition between the kinetic energy of
the electrons and the magnetic exchange energy drives the formation of
effectively one-dimensional ferromagnetic zig-zag chains. Due to a topological
phase factor in the hopping, the chains are intrinsically insulating and
orbital-ordered. Most surprisingly, the strong Coulomb interaction between
electrons on the same Mn-ion leads to the experimentally observed charge
ordering. For doping less than 1/2 the system is unstable towards phase
separation into a ferromagnetic metallic and charge-ordered insulating phase.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett., 4 pages, 4 figure
Origin of the Charge-Orbital Stripe Structure in La_(1-x)Ca_(x)MnO_(3) (x=1/2, 2/3)
We propose the origin of the charge-ordered stripe structure with the orbital
ordering observed experimentally in La_(1-x)Ca_(x)MnO_(3) (x=1/2, 2/3), in
which the long-range Coulomb interaction plays an essential role. We study a
Hubbard model with doubly-degenerate e_g orbitals, and treat the on-site
Coulomb interaction (U) and the nearest-neighbor one (V) with the Hartree-Fock
approximation. Both the charge and orbital ordering structures observed in
experiments are reproduced in a wide region of the U-V phase diagram determined
by the present study. The stability of the orbital ordering is also confirmed
by the perturbation theory.Comment: 4 pages, 5 Postscript figures, REVTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
The politicisation of evaluation: constructing and contesting EU policy performance
Although systematic policy evaluation has been conducted for decades and has been growing strongly within the European Union (EU) institutions and in the member states, it remains largely underexplored in political science literatures. Extant work in political science and public policy typically focuses on elements such as agenda setting, policy shaping, decision making, or implementation rather than evaluation. Although individual pieces of research on evaluation in the EU have started to emerge, most often regarding policy âeffectivenessâ (one criterion among many in evaluation), a more structured approach is currently missing. This special issue aims to address this gap in political science by focusing on four key focal points: evaluation institutions (including rules and cultures), evaluation actors and interests (including competencies, power, roles and tasks), evaluation design (including research methods and theories, and their impact on policy design and legislation), and finally, evaluation purpose and use (including the relationships between discourse and scientific evidence, political attitudes and strategic use). The special issue considers how each of these elements contributes to an evolving governance system in the EU, where evaluation is playing an increasingly important role in decision making
Dynamical Mean-Field Solution for a Model of Metal-Insulator Transitions in Moderately Doped Manganites
We propose that a specific spatial configuration of lattice sites that
energetically favor {\it 3+} or {\it 4+} Mn ions in moderately doped manganites
constitutes approximately a spatially random two-energy-level system. Such an
effect results in a mechanism of metal-insulator transitions that appears to be
different from both the Anderson transition and the Mott-Hubbard transition.
Correspondingly, a disordered Kondo lattice model is put forward, whose
dynamical mean-field solution agrees reasonably with experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps figures, Revtex. First submitted to PRL on May 16,
199
AC susceptibility and V NMR study of MnVO
We report V zero-field NMR of manganese vanadate spinel of
MnVO, together with both ac and dc magnetization measurements. The
field and temperature dependence of ac susceptibilities show a
reentrant-spin-glass-like behavior below the ferrimagnetic(FEM) ordering
temperature. The zero-field NMR spectrum consists of multiple lines ranging
from 240 MHz to 320 MHz. Its temperature dependence reveals that the ground
state is given by the simultaneous formation of a long-range FEM order and a
short-range order component. We attribute the spin-glass-like anomalies to
freezing and fluctuations of the short-range ordered state caused by the
competition between spin and orbital ordering of the V site
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