432 research outputs found
Evidence of a bond-nematic phase in LiCuVO4
Polarized and unpolarized neutron scattering experiments on the frustrated
ferromagnetic spin-1/2 chain LiCuVO4 show that the phase transition at HQ of 8
Tesla is driven by quadrupolar fluctuations and that dipolar correlations are
short-range with moments parallel to the applied magnetic field in the
high-field phase. Heat-capacity measurements evidence a phase transition into
this high-field phase, with an anomaly clearly different from that at low
magnetic fields. Our experimental data are consistent with a picture where the
ground state above HQ has a next-nearest neighbour bond-nematic order along the
chains with a fluid-like coherence between weakly coupled chains.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Doubly resonant optical nanoantenna arrays for polarization resolved measurements of surface-enhanced Raman scattering
We report that rhomb-shaped metal nanoantenna arrays support multiple
plasmonic resonances, making them favorable bio-sensing substrates. Besides the
two localized plasmonic dipole modes associated with the two principle axes of
the rhombi, the sample supports an additional grating-induced surface plasmon
polariton resonance. The plasmonic properties of all modes are carefully
studied by far-field measurements together with numerical and analytical
calculations. The sample is then applied to surface-enhanced Raman scattering
measurements. It is shown to be highly efficient since two plasmonic resonances
of the structure were simultaneously tuned to coincide with the excitation and
the emission wave- length in the SERS experiment. The analysis is completed by
measuring the impact of the polarization angle on the SERS signal.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
The Two-Dimensional Square-Lattice S=1/2 Antiferromagnet Cu(pz)(ClO)
We present an experimental study of the two-dimensional S=1/2 square-lattice
antiferromagnet Cu(pz)(ClO) (pz denotes pyrazine - )
using specific heat measurements, neutron diffraction and cold-neutron
spectroscopy. The magnetic field dependence of the magnetic ordering
temperature was determined from specific heat measurements for fields
perpendicular and parallel to the square-lattice planes, showing identical
field-temperature phase diagrams. This suggest that spin anisotropies in
Cu(pz)(ClO) are small. The ordered antiferromagnetic structure is a
collinear arrangement with the magnetic moments along either the
crystallographic b- or c-axis. The estimated ordered magnetic moment at zero
field is m_0=0.47(5)mu_B and thus much smaller than the available single-ion
magnetic moment. This is evidence for strong quantum fluctuations in the
ordered magnetic phase of Cu(pz)(ClO). Magnetic fields applied
perpendicular to the square-lattice planes lead to an increase of the
antiferromagnetically ordered moment to m_0=0.93(5)mu_B at mu_0H=13.5T -
evidence that magnetic fields quench quantum fluctuations. Neutron spectroscopy
reveals the presence of a gapped spin excitations at the antiferromagnetic zone
center, and it can be explained with a slightly anisotropic nearest neighbor
exchange coupling described by J_1^{xy}=1.563(13)meV and
J_1^z=0.9979(2)J_1^{xy}
Improved treatment of the molecular final-states uncertainties for the KATRIN neutrino-mass measurement
The KArlsruhe TRItium Neutrino experiment (KATRIN) aims to determine the
effective mass of the electron antineutrino via a high-precision measurement of
the tritium beta-decay spectrum in its end-point region. The target
neutrino-mass sensitivity of 0.2 eV / c^2 at 90% C.L. can only be achieved in
the case of high statistics and a good control of the systematic uncertainties.
One key systematic effect originates from the calculation of the molecular
final states of T_2 beta decay. In the first neutrino-mass analyses of KATRIN
the contribution of the uncertainty of the molecular final-states distribution
(FSD) was estimated via a conservative phenomenological approach to be 0.02
eV^2 / c^4. In this paper a new procedure is presented for estimating the
FSD-related uncertainties by considering the details of the final-states
calculation, i.e. the uncertainties of constants, parameters, and functions
used in the calculation as well as its convergence itself as a function of the
basis-set size used in expanding the molecular wave functions. The calculated
uncertainties are directly propagated into the experimental observable, the
squared neutrino mass m_nu^2. With the new procedure the FSD-related
uncertainty is constrained to 0.0013 eV^2 / c^4, for the experimental
conditions of the first KATRIN measurement campaign
Consequences of critical interchain couplings and anisotropy on a Haldane chain
Effects of interchain couplings and anisotropy on a Haldane chain have been
investigated by single crystal inelastic neutron scattering and density
functional theory (DFT) calculations on the model compound SrNiVO.
Significant effects on low energy excitation spectra are found where the
Haldane gap (; where is the intrachain exchange
interaction) is replaced by three energy minima at different antiferromagnetic
zone centers due to the complex interchain couplings. Further, the triplet
states are split into two branches by single-ion anisotropy. Quantitative
information on the intrachain and interchain interactions as well as on the
single-ion anisotropy are obtained from the analyses of the neutron scattering
spectra by the random phase approximation (RPA) method. The presence of
multiple competing interchain interactions is found from the analysis of the
experimental spectra and is also confirmed by the DFT calculations. The
interchain interactions are two orders of magnitude weaker than the
nearest-neighbour intrachain interaction = 8.7~meV. The DFT calculations
reveal that the dominant intrachain nearest-neighbor interaction occurs via
nontrivial extended superexchange pathways Ni--O--V--O--Ni involving the empty
orbital of V ions. The present single crystal study also allows us to
correctly position SrNiVO in the theoretical - phase
diagram [T. Sakai and M. Takahashi, Phys. Rev. B 42, 4537 (1990)] showing where
it lies within the spin-liquid phase.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables PRB (accepted). in Phys. Rev. B (2015
Revisiting the ground state of CoAlO: comparison to the conventional antiferromagnet MnAlO
The A-site spinel material, CoAl2O4, is a physical realization of the
frustrated diamond-lattice antiferromagnet, a model in which is predicted to
contain unique incommensurate or `spin-spiral liquid' ground states. Our
previous single-crystal neutron scattering study instead classified it as a
`kinetically-inhibited' antiferromagnet, where the long ranged correlations of
a collinear Neel ground state are blocked by the freezing of domain wall motion
below a first-order phase transition at T* = 6.5 K. The current paper expands
on our original results in several important ways. New elastic and inelastic
neutron measurements are presented that show our initial conclusions are
affected by neither the sample measured nor the instrument resolution, while
measurements to temperatures as low as T = 250 mK limit the possible role being
played by low-lying thermal excitations. Polarized diffuse neutron measurements
confirm reports of short-range antiferromagnetic correlations and diffuse
streaks of scattering, but major diffuse features are explained as signatures
of overlapping critical correlations between neighboring Brillouin zones.
Finally, and critically, this paper presents detailed elastic and inelastic
measurements of magnetic correlations in a single-crystal of MnAl2O4, which
acts as an unfrustrated analogue to CoAl2O4. The unfrustrated material is shown
to have a classical continuous phase transition to Neel order at T_N = 39 K,
with collective spinwave excitations and Lorentzian-like critical correlations
which diverge at the transition. Direct comparison between the two compounds
indicates that CoAl2O4 is unique, not in the nature of high-temperature diffuse
correlations, but rather in the nature of the frozen state below T*. The higher
level of cation inversion in the MnAl2O4 sample indicates that this novel
behavior is primarily an effect of greater next-nearest-neighbor exchange.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, acccepted for publication in Physical Review
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A classical description of subnanometer resolution by atomic features in metallic structures
Recent experiments have evidenced sub-nanometer resolution in plasmonic-enhanced probe spectroscopy. Such a high resolution cannot be simply explained using the commonly considered radii of metallic nanoparticles on plasmonic probes. In this contribution the effects of defects as small as a single atom found on spherical plasmonic particles acting as probing tips are investigated in connection with the spatial resolution provided. The presence of abundant edge and corner sites with atomic scale dimensions in crystalline metallic nanoparticles is evident from transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images. Electrodynamic calculations based on the Finite Element Method (FEM) are implemented to reveal the impact of the presence of such atomic features in probing tips on the lateral spatial resolution and field localization. Our analysis is developed for three different configurations, and under resonant and non-resonant illumination conditions, respectively. Based on this analysis, the limits of field enhancement, lateral resolution and field confinement in plasmon-enhanced spectroscopy and microscopy are inferred, reaching values below 1 nanometer for reasonable atomic sizes
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Plasmon response evaluation based on image-derived arbitrary nanostructures
The optical response of realistic 3D plasmonic substrates composed of randomly shaped particles of different size and interparticle distance distributions in addition to nanometer scale surface roughness is intrinsically challenging to simulate due to computational limitations. Here, we present a Finite Element Method (FEM)-based methodology that bridges in-depth theoretical investigations and experimental optical response of plasmonic substrates composed of such silver nanoparticles. Parametrized scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) active substrate and tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) probes are used to simulate the far-and near-field optical response. Far-field calculations are consistent with experimental dark field spectra and charge distribution images reveal for the first time in arbitrary structures the contributions of interparticle hybridized modes such as sub-radiant and super-radiant modes that also locally organize as basic units for Fano resonances. Near-field simulations expose the spatial position-dependent impact of hybridization on field enhancement. Simulations of representative sections of TERS tips are shown to exhibit the same unexpected coupling modes. Near-field simulations suggest that these modes can contribute up to 50% of the amplitude of the plasmon resonance at the tip apex but, interestingly, have a small effect on its frequency in the visible range. The band position is shown to be extremely sensitive to particle nanoscale roughness, highlighting the necessity to preserve detailed information at both the largest and the smallest scales. To the best of our knowledge, no currently available method enables reaching such a detailed description of large scale realistic 3D plasmonic systems
Magnetic and structural transitions in LaNaFeAs single crystals
LaNaFeAs single crystals have been grown out of an
NaAs flux in an alumina crucible and characterized by measuring magnetic
susceptibility, electrical resistivity, specific heat, as well as single
crystal x-ray and neutron diffraction. LaNaFeAs single
crystals show a structural phase transition from a high temperature tetragonal
phase to a low-temperature orthorhombic phase at T\,=\,125\,K. This
structural transition is accompanied by an anomaly in the temperature
dependence of electrical resistivity, anisotropic magnetic susceptibility, and
specific heat. Concomitant with the structural phase transition, the Fe moments
order along the \emph{a} direction with an ordered moment of
0.7(1)\, at \emph{T}\,=\,5 K. The low temperature stripe
antiferromagnetic structure is the same as that in other
\emph{A}FeAs (\emph{A}\,=\,Ca, Sr, Ba) compounds.
LaNaFeAs provides a new material platform for the
study of iron-based superconductors where the electron-hole asymmetry could be
studied by simply varying La/Na ratio.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Helical spin-waves, magnetic order, and fluctuations in the langasite compound Ba3NbFe3Si2O14
We have investigated the spin fluctuations in the langasite compound
Ba3NbFe3Si2O14 in both the ordered state and as a function of temperature. The
low temperature magnetic structure is defined by a spiral phase characterized
by magnetic Bragg peaks at q=(0,0,tau ~ 1/7) onset at TN=27 K as previously
reported by Marty et al. The nature of the fluctuations and temperature
dependence of the order parameter is consistent with a classical second order
phase transition for a two dimensional triangular antiferromagnet. We will show
that the physical properties and energy scales including the ordering
wavevector, Curie-Weiss temperature, and the spin-waves can be explained
through the use of only symmetric exchange constants without the need for the
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. This is accomplished through a set of
``helical" exchange pathways along the c direction imposed by the chiral
crystal structure and naturally explains the magnetic diffuse scattering which
displays a strong vector chirality up to high temperatures well above the
ordering temperature. This illustrates a strong coupling between magnetic and
crystalline chirality in this compound.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Physical Review
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