519 research outputs found
Field-Dependent Hall Effect in Single Crystal Heavy Fermion YbAgGe below 1K
We report the results of a low temperature (T >= 50 mK) and high field (H <=
180 kOe) study of the Hall resistivity in single crystals of YbAgGe, a heavy
fermion compound that demonstrates field-induced non-Fermi-liquid behavior near
its field-induced quantum critical point. Distinct features in the anisotropic,
field-dependent Hall resistivity sharpen on cooling down and at the base
temperature are close to the respective critical fields for the field-induced
quantum critical point. The field range of the non-Fermi-liquid region
decreases on cooling but remains finite at the base temperature with no
indication of its conversion to a point for T -> 0. At the base temperature,
the functional form of the field-dependent Hall coefficient is field direction
dependent and complex beyond existing simple models thus reflecting the
multi-component Fermi surface of the material and its non-trivial modification
at the quantum critical point
Magnetoelectric effects in an organo-metallic quantum magnet
We observe a bilinear magnetic field-induced electric polarization of 50 in single crystals of NiCl-4SC(NH) (DTN). DTN forms a
tetragonal structure that breaks inversion symmetry, with the highly polar
thiourea molecules all tilted in the same direction along the c-axis.
Application of a magnetic field between 2 and 12 T induces canted
antiferromagnetism of the Ni spins and the resulting magnetization closely
tracks the electric polarization. We speculate that the Ni magnetic forces
acting on the soft organic lattice can create significant distortions and
modify the angles of the thiourea molecules, thereby creating a magnetoelectric
effect. This is an example of how magnetoelectric effects can be constructed in
organo-metallic single crystals by combining magnetic ions with electrically
polar organic elements.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Spin Dynamics of in the Field-Induced Ordered Phase
- (known as DTN) is a spin-1 material with a strong
single-ion anisotropy that is regarded as a new candidate for Bose-Einstein
condensation (BEC) of spin degrees of freedom. We present a systematic study of
the low-energy excitation spectrum of DTN in the field-induced magnetically
ordered phase by means of high-field electron spin resonance measurements at
temperatures down to 0.45 K. We argue that two gapped modes observed in the
experiment can be consistently interpreted within a four-sublattice
antiferromagnet model with a finite interaction between two tetragonal
subsystems and unbroken axial symmetry. The latter is crucial for the
interpretation of the field-induced ordering in DTN in terms of BEC.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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