15,769 research outputs found

    Temperature dependence of the spin and orbital magnetization density in Sm1−xGdxAl2Sm_{1-x}Gd_{x} Al_{2} around the spin-orbital compensation point

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    Non-resonant ferromagnetic x-ray diffraction has been used to separate the spin and orbital contribution to the magnetization density of the proposed zero-moment ferromagnet Sm0.982Gd0.018Al2Sm_{0.982}Gd_{0.018} Al_{2}. The alignment of the spin and orbital moments relative to the net magnetization shows a sign reversal at 84K, the compensation temperature. Below this temperature the orbital moment is larger than the spin moment, and vice versa above it. This result implies that the compensation mechanism is driven by the different temperature dependencies of the 4f4f spin and orbital moments. Specific heat data indicate that the system remains ferromagnetically ordered throughout

    Crack initiation at notches in low cycle fatigue Final report, 1 Aug. 1968 - 15 Mar. 1969

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    Crack initiation at notches in low cycle fatigue determined by plastic strain distributio

    Anisotropic Diamagnetic Response in Type-II Superconductors with Gap and Fermi-Surface Anisotropies

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    Effects of anisotropic gap structures on a diamagnetic response are investigated in order to demonstrate that the field-angle-resolved magnetization (ML(χ)M_L(\chi)) measurement can be used as a spectroscopic method to detect gap structures. Our microscopic calculation based on the quasiclassical Eilenberger formalism reveals that ML(χ)M_L(\chi) in a superconductor with four-fold gap displays a four-fold oscillation reflecting the gap and Fermi surface anisotropies, and the sign of this oscillation changes at a field between Hc1H_{c1} and Hc2H_{c2}. As a prototype of unconventional superconductors, magnetization data for borocarbides are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Oxygen vacancy segregation and space-charge effects in grain boundaries of dry and hydrated BaZrO3

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    A space-charge model is applied to describe the equilibrium effects of segregation of double-donor oxygen vacancies to grain boundaries in dry and wet acceptor-doped samples of the perovskite oxide BaZrO3. The grain boundary core vacancy concentrations and electrostatic potential barriers resulting from different vacancy segregation energies are evaluated. Density-functional calculations on vacancy segregation to the mirror-symmetric \Sigma 3 (112) [-110] tilt grain boundary are also presented. Our results indicate that oxygen vacancy segregation can be responsible for the low grain boundary proton conductivity in BaZrO3 reported in the literature

    Single-crystal growth of underdoped Bi-2223

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    To investigate the origin of the enhanced Tc ({\approx} 110 K) of the trilayer cuprate superconductor Bi2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10+{\delta} (Bi-2223), its underdoped single crystals are a critical requirement. Here, we demonstrate the first successful in-plane resistivity measurements of heavily underdoped Bi-2223 (zero-resistivity temperatures {\approx} 20~35 K). Detailed crystal growth methods, the annealing process, as well as X-ray diffraction (XRD) and magnetic susceptibility measurement results are also reported.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 27th International Symposium on Superconductivity, ISS 2014, to appear in Physics Procedi

    Linear-response theory of the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect

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    We theoretically investigate the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect, in which the spin current is injected from a ferromagnet into an attached nonmagnetic metal in a direction parallel to the temperature gradient. Using the fact that the phonon heat current flows intensely into the attached nonmagnetic metal in this particular configuration, we show that the sign of the spin injection signal in the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect can be opposite to that in the conventional transverse spin Seebeck effect when the electron-phonon interaction in the nonmagnetic metal is sufficiently large. Our linear-response approach can explain the sign reversal of the spin injection signal recently observed in the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect.Comment: Proc. of ICM 2012 (Accepted for publication in J. Korean Phys. Soc.), typos correcte
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