2,338 research outputs found
Driving rate effects in avalanche-mediated, first-order phase transitions
We have studied the driving rate and temperature dependence of the power-law
exponents that characterize the avalanche distribution in first-order phase
transitions. Measurements of acoustic emission in structural transitions in
Cu-Zn-Al and Cu-Al-Ni are presented. We show how the observed behaviour emerges
within a general framework of competing time scales of avalanche relaxation,
driving rate, and thermal fluctuations. We have confirmed our findings by
numerical simulations of a prototype model.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Field induced long-range-ordering in an S=1 quasi-one-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet
We have measured the heat capacity and magnetization of the spin one
one-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet NDMAP and constructed a magnetic
field versus temperature phase diagram. We found a field induced long-range
magnetic ordering. We have been successful in explaining the phase diagram
theoretically.Comment: 6 pages, 18 figure
Pressure-induced amorphization, crystal-crystal transformations and the memory glass effect in interacting particles in two dimensions
We study a model of interacting particles in two dimensions to address the
relation between crystal-crystal transformations and pressure-induced
amorphization. On increasing pressure at very low temperature, our model
undergoes a martensitic crystal-crystal transformation. The characteristics of
the resulting polycrystalline structure depend on defect density, compression
rate, and nucleation and growth barriers. We find two different limiting cases.
In one of them the martensite crystals, once nucleated, grow easily
perpendicularly to the invariant interface, and the final structure contains
large crystals of the different martensite variants. Upon decompression almost
every atom returns to its original position, and the original crystal is fully
recovered. In the second limiting case, after nucleation the growth of
martensite crystals is inhibited by energetic barriers. The final morphology in
this case is that of a polycrystal with a very small crystal size. This may be
taken to be amorphous if we have only access (as experimentally may be the
case) to the angularly averaged structure factor. However, this `X-ray
amorphous' material is anisotropic, and this shows up upon decompression, when
it recovers the original crystalline structure with an orientation correlated
with the one it had prior to compression. The memory effect of this X-ray
amorphous material is a natural consequence of the memory effect associated to
the underlying martensitic transformation. We suggest that this kind of
mechanism is present in many of the experimental observations of the memory
glass effect, in which a crystal with the original orientation is recovered
from an apparently amorphous sample when pressure is released.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Spin-Reorientation Transition of Field-Induced Magnetic Ordering Phases in the Anisotropic Haldane System
A possible spin-reorientation transition in field-induced magnetic ordering
phases of the S=1 Haldane system with large easy-plane anisotropy is proposed,
using an effective Lagrangian formalism as well as the density matrix
renormalization group method. Such a spin-reorientation transition is predicted
in the case where the applied magnetic field is inclined from the easy axis of
the anisotropy. We point out that this transition has a close connection with a
variation of the order parameter even at zero temperature, although it is
different from a quantum analog of the so-called spin-flop transition proposed
for the system having a strong easy axis anisotropy. In connection with a novel
phase observed recently in the Haldane system at high fields, we discuss
possible implications for the field-induced magnetic ordering.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Phase diagram and hidden order for generalized spin ladders
We investigate the phase diagram of antiferromagnetic spin ladders with
additional exchange interactions on diagonal bonds by variational and numerical
methods. These generalized spin ladders interpolate smoothly between the
chain with competing nn and nnn interactions, the chain with
alternating exchange and the antiferromagnetic chain. The Majumdar-Ghosh
ground states are formulated as matrix product states and are shown to exhibit
the same type of hidden order as the af chain. Generalized matrix product
states are used for a variational calculation of the ground state energy and
the spin and string correlation functions. Numerical (Lanczos) calculations of
the energies of the ground state and of the low-lying excited states are
performed, and compare reasonably with the variational approach. Our results
support the hypothesis that the dimer and Majumdar-Ghosh points are in the same
phase as the af chain.Comment: 23 pages, REVTEX, 7 figure
Realization of the mean-field universality class in spin-crossover materials
In spin-crossover materials, the volume of a molecule changes depending on
whether it is in the high-spin (HS) or low-spin (LS) state. This change causes
distortion of the lattice. Elastic interactions among these distortions play an
important role for the cooperative properties of spin-transition phenomena. We
find that the critical behavior caused by this elastic interaction belongs to
the mean-field universality class, in which the critical exponents for the
spontaneous magnetization and the susceptibility are and , respectively. Furthermore, the spin-spin correlation function is a
constant at long distances, and it does not show an exponential decay in
contrast to short-range models. The value of the correlation function at long
distances shows different size-dependences: , , and
constant for temperatures above, at, and below the critical temperature,
respectively. The model does not exhibit clusters, even near the critical
point. We also found that cluster growth is suppressed in the present model and
that there is no critical opalescence in the coexistence region. During the
relaxation process from a metastable state at the end of a hysteresis loop,
nucleation phenomena are not observed, and spatially uniform configurations are
maintained during the change of the fraction of HS and LS. These
characteristics of the mean-field model are expected to be found not only in
spin-crossover materials, but also generally in systems where elastic
distortion mediates the interaction among local states.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figure
Simulations of Spinodal Nucleation in Systems with Elastic Interactions
Systems with long-range interactions quenched into a metastable state near
the pseudospinodal exhibit nucleation that is qualitatively different than the
classical nucleation observed near the coexistence curve. We have observed
nucleation droplets in our Langevin simulations of a two-dimensional model of
martensitic transformations and have determined that the structure of the
nucleating droplet differs from the stable martensite structure. Our results,
together with experimental measurements of the phonon dispersion curve, allow
us to predict the nature of the droplet. These results have implications for
nucleation in many solid-solid transitions and the structure of the final
state
Microstructural characterization of AISI 431 martensitic stainless steel laser-deposited coatings
High cooling rates during laser cladding of stainless steels may alter the microstructure and phase constitution of the claddings and consequently change their functional properties. In this research, solidification structures and solid state phase transformation products in single and multi layer AISI 431 martensitic stainless steel coatings deposited by laser cladding at different processing speeds are investigated by optical microscopy, Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), orientation imaging microscopy (OIM), ternary phase diagram, Schaeffler and TTT diagrams. The results of this study show how partitionless solidification and higher solidification rates alter the microstructure and phase constitution of martensitic stainless steel laser deposited coatings. In addition, it is shown that while different cladding speeds have no effect on austenite–martensite orientation relationship in the coatings, increasing the cladding speed has resulted in a reduction of hardness in deposited coatings which is in contrast to the common idea about obtaining higher hardness values at higher cladding speeds.
Three-Dimensional Elastic Compatibility: Twinning in Martensites
We show how the St.Venant compatibility relations for strain in three
dimensions lead to twinning for the cubic to tetragonal transition in
martensitic materials within a Ginzburg-Landau model in terms of the six
components of the symmetric strain tensor. The compatibility constraints
generate an anisotropic long-range interaction in the order parameter
(deviatoric strain) components. In contrast to two dimensions, the free energy
is characterized by a "landscape" of competing metastable states. We find a
variety of textures, which result from the elastic frustration due to the
effects of compatibility. Our results are also applicable to structural phase
transitions in improper ferroelastics such as ferroelectrics and
magnetoelastics, where strain acts as a secondary order parameter
Hidden Orders and RVB Formation of the Four-Leg Heisenberg Ladder Model
The ground state of the four-chain Heisenberg ladder model is numerically
investigated. Hidden-order correlations suitable for the system are introduced
and calculated with an emphasis on the spatially isotropic point, where a
corresponding material exists. The existence of a long-range hidden correlation
indicates formation of a short-range RVB state in the case of the
antiferromagnetic inter-chain coupling. A transition between the phase of the
ferromagnetic inter-chain coupling and that of the antiferromagnetic one is
discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 16 Postscript figure
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