1,790 research outputs found

    Evidence for a bicritical point in the XXZ Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a simple cubic lattice

    Full text link
    The classical Heisenberg antiferromagnet with uniaxial exchange anisotropy, the XXZ model, in a magnetic field on a simple cubic lattice is studied with the help of extensive Monte Carlo simulations. Analyzing, especially, various staggered susceptibilities and Binder cumulants, we present clear evidence for the meeting point of the antiferromagnetic, spin--flop, and paramagnetic phases being a bicritical point with Heisenberg symmetry. Results are compared to previous predictions based on various theoretical approaches.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures (to appear in the Phys. Rev. E (2011)

    Multicritical points in the three-dimensional XXZ antiferromagnet with single-ion anisotropy

    Full text link
    The classical Heisenberg antiferromagnet with uniaxial exchange anisotropy, the XXZ model, and competing planar single-ion anisotropy in a magnetic field on a simple cubic lattice is studied with the help of extensive Monte Carlo simulations. The biconical (supersolid) phase, bordering the antiferromagnetic and spin-flop phases, is found to become thermally unstable well below the onset of the disordered, paramagnetic phase, leading to interesting multicritical points

    Mean-field phase diagrams of AT2X2AT_2X_2 compounds

    Full text link
    Magnetic-field -- temperature phase diagrams of the axial next-nearest-neighbor Ising model are calculated within the framework of a Landau-type expansion of the free energy derived from molecular-field theory. Good qualitative agreement is found with recently reported results on body-centered-tetragonal UPd2Si2UPd_2Si_2. This work is expected to also be relevant for related compounds.Comment: J1K 2R1 8 pages (RevTex 3.0), 2 figures available upon request, Report# CRPS-94-0

    Anomalies in the antiferromagnetic phase of metamagnets

    Full text link
    Motivated by recent experiments on the metamagnet FeBr2, anomalies of the magnetization and the specific heat in the antiferromagnetic phase of related spin models are studied systematically using Monte Carlo simulations. In particular, the dependence of the anomalous behavior on competing intralayer interactions, the spin value and the Ising-like anisotropy of the Hamiltonian is investigated. Results are compared to experimental findings on FeBr2.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Heisenberg antiferromagnets with uniaxial exchange and cubic anisotropies in a field

    Full text link
    Classical Heisenberg antiferromagnets with uniaxial exchange anisotropy and a cubic anisotropy term in a field on simple cubic lattices are studied with the help of ground state considerations and extensive Monte Carlo simulations. Especially, we analyze the role of non-collinear structures of biconical type occurring in addition to the well-known antiferromagnetic and spin-flop structures. Pertinent phase diagrams are determined, and compared to previous findings.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure

    Biconical structures in two-dimensional anisotropic Heisenberg antiferromagnets

    Full text link
    Square lattice Heisenberg and XY antiferromagnets with uniaxial anisotropy in a field along the easy axis are studied. Based on ground state considerations and Monte Carlo simulations, the role of biconical structures in the transition region between the antiferromagnetic and spin--flop phases is analyzed. In particular, adding a single--ion anisotropy to the XXZ antiferromagnet, one observes, depending on the sign of that anisotropy, either an intervening biconical phase or a direct transition of first order separating the two phases. In case of the anisotropic XY model, the degeneracy of the ground state, at a critical field, in antiferromagnetic, spin--flop, and bidirectional structures seems to result, as in the case of the XXZ model, in a narrow disordered phase between the antiferromagnetic and spin--flop phases, dominated by bidirectional fluctuations.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.

    Mixed Ising ferrimagnets with next-nearest neighbour couplings on square lattices

    Full text link
    We study Ising ferrimagnets on square lattices with antiferromagnetic exchange couplings between spins of values S=1/2 and S=1 on neighbouring sites, couplings between S=1 spins at next--nearest neighbour sites of the lattice, and a single--site anisotropy term for the S=1 spins. Using mainly ground state considerations and extensive Monte Carlo simulations, we investigate various aspects of the phase diagram, including compensation points, critical properties, and temperature dependent anomalies. In contrast to previous belief, the next--nearest neighbour couplings, when being of antiferromagnetic type, may lead to compensation points

    Critical phenomena at perfect and non-perfect surfaces

    Full text link
    The effect of imperfections on surface critical properties is studied for Ising models with nearest-neighbour ferromagnetic couplings on simple cubic lattices. In particular, results of Monte Carlo simulations for flat, perfect surfaces are compared to those for flat surfaces with random, 'weak' or 'strong', interactions between neighbouring spins in the surface layer, and for surfaces with steps of monoatomic height. Surface critical exponents at the ordinary transition, in particular β1=0.80±0.01\beta_1 = 0.80 \pm 0.01, are found to be robust against these perturbations.Comment: 7 pages, 13 figures, submitted to European Physical Journal

    Wetting and interfacial adsorption in the Blume-Capel model on the square lattice

    Full text link
    We study the Blume-Capel model on the square lattice. To allow for wetting and interfacial adsorption, the spins on opposite boundaries are fixed in two different states, "+1" and "-1", with reduced couplings at one of the boundaries. Using mainly Monte Carlo techniques, of Metropolis and Wang-Landau type, phase diagrams showing bulk and wetting transitions are determined. The role of the non-boundary state, "0", adsorbed preferably at the interface between "-1" and "+1" rich regions, is elucidated.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, minor corrections to previous versio
    • …
    corecore