994 research outputs found
Heterogeneous freezing in a geometrically frustrated spin model without disorder: spontaneous generation of two time-scales
By considering the constrained motion of classical spins in a geometrically
frustrated magnet, we find a dynamical freezing temperature below which the
system gets trapped in metastable states with a "frozen" moment and dynamical
heterogeneities. The residual collective degrees of freedom are strongly
correlated, and by spontaneously forming aggregates, they are unable to
reorganize the system. The phase space is then fragmented in a macroscopic
number of disconnected sectors (broken ergodicity), resulting in self-induced
disorder and "thermodynamic" anomalies, measured by the loss of a finite
configurational entropy. We discuss these results in the view of experimental
results on the kagome compounds, SrCr(9p)Ga(12-9p)O19, (H30)Fe3(SO4)2(OH)6,
Cu3V2O7(OH)2.2H2O and Cu3BaV2O8(OH)2.Comment: 17 pages, 14 fi
Ground-State Candidate for the Dipolar Kagome Ising Antiferromagnet
We have investigated the low-temperature thermodynamic properties of the
dipolar kagome Ising antiferromagnet using at-equilibrium Monte Carlo
simulations, in the quest for the ground-state manifold. In spite of the
limitations of a single spin-flip approach, we managed to identify certain
ordering patterns in the low-temperature regime and we propose a candidate for
this unknown state. This novel configuration presents some intriguing features
and passes several test-criteria, making it a very likely choice for the
dipolar long-range order of this kagome Ising antiferromagnet.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Propagation and Ghosts in the Classical Kagome Antiferromagnet
We investigate the classical spin dynamics of the kagome antiferromagnet by
combining Monte Carlo and spin dynamics simulations. We show that this model
has two distinct low temperature dynamical regimes, both sustaining propagative
modes. The expected gauge invariance type of the low energy low temperature out
of plane excitations is also evidenced in the non linear regime. A detailed
analysis of the excitations allows to identify ghosts in the dynamical
structure factor, i.e propagating excitations with a strongly reduced spectral
weight. We argue that these dynamical extinction rules are of geometrical
origin.Comment: 4+ pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in the Physical Review
Letter
Voltage induced control and magnetoresistance of noncollinear frustrated magnets
Noncollinear frustrated magnets are proposed as a new class of spintronic
materials with high magnetoresistance which can be controlled with relatively
small applied voltages. It is demonstrated that their magnetic configuration
strongly depends on position of the Fermi energy and applied voltage. The
voltage induced control of noncollinear frustrated materials (VCFM) can be seen
as a way to intrinsic control of colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) and is the
bulk material counterpart of spin transfer torque concept used to control giant
magnetoresistance in layered spin-valve structures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Graphene in periodically alternating magnetic field: unusual quantization of the anomalous Hall effect
We study the energy spectrum and electronic properties of graphene in a
periodic magnetic field of zero average with a symmetry of triangular lattice.
The periodic field leads to formation of a set of minibands separated by gaps,
which can be manipulated by external field. The Berry phase, related to the
motion of electrons in space, and the corresponding Chern numbers
characterizing topology of the energy bands are calculated analytically and
numerically. In this connection, we discuss the anomalous Hall effect in the
insulating state, when the Fermi level is located in the minigap. The results
of calculations show that in the model of gapless Dirac spectrum of graphene
the anomalous Hall effect can be treated as a sum of fractional quantum
numbers, related to the nonequivalent Dirac points.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Neutron diffraction investigation of the H-T phase diagram above the longitudinal incommensurate phase of BaCo2V2O8
The quasi-one-dimensional antiferromagnetic Ising-like compound BaCo2V2O8 has
been shown to be describable by the Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid theory in its
gapless phase induced by a magnetic field applied along the Ising axis. Above
3.9 T, this leads to an exotic field-induced low-temperature magnetic order,
made of a longitudinal incommensurate spin-density wave, stabilized by weak
interchain interactions. By single-crystal neutron diffraction we explore the
destabilization of this phase at a higher magnetic field. We evidence a
transition at around 8.5 T towards a more conventional magnetic structure with
antiferromagnetic components in the plane perpendicular to the magnetic field.
The phase diagram boundaries and the nature of this second field-induced phase
are discussed with respect to previous results obtained by means of nuclear
magnetic resonance and electron spin resonance, and in the framework of the
simple model based on the Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid theory, which obviously has
to be refined in this complex system.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
XY checkerboard antiferromagnet in external field
Ordering by thermal fluctuations is studied for the classical XY
antiferromagnet on a checkerboard lattice in zero and finite magnetic fields by
means of analytical and Monte Carlo methods. The model exhibits a variety of
novel broken symmetries including states with nematic ordering in zero field
and with triatic order parameter at high fields.Comment: 6 page
Competing interactions in artificial spin chains
The low-energy magnetic configurations of artificial frustrated spin chains
are investigated using magnetic force microscopy and micromagnetic simulations.
Contrary to most studies on two-dimensional artificial spin systems where
frustration arises from the lattice geometry, here magnetic frustration
originates from competing interactions between neighboring spins. By tuning
continuously the strength and sign of these interactions, we show that
different magnetic phases can be stabilized. Comparison between our
experimental findings and predictions from the one-dimensional Anisotropic
Next-Nearest-Neighbor Ising (ANNNI) model reveals that artificial frustrated
spin chains have a richer phase diagram than initially expected. Besides the
observation of several magnetic orders and the potential extension of this work
to highly-degenerated artificial spin chains, our results suggest that the
micromagnetic nature of the individual magnetic elements allows observation of
metastable spin configurations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Dzyaloshinski-Moriya interactions in the kagome lattice
The kagom\'e lattice exhibits peculiar magnetic properties due to its
strongly frustated cristallographic structure, based on corner sharing
triangles. For nearest neighbour antiferromagnetic Heisenberg interactions
there is no Neel ordering at zero temperature both for quantum and classical s
pins. We show that, due to the peculiar structure, antisymmetric
Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya interactions ()
are present in this latt ice. In order to derive microscopically this
interaction we consider a set of localized d-electronic states. For classical
spins systems, we then study the phase diagram (T, D/J) through mean field
approximation and Monte-Carlo simulations and show that the antisymmetric
interaction drives this system to ordered states as soon as this interaction is
non zero. This mechanism could be involved to explain the magnetic structure of
Fe-jarosites.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Presented at SCES 200
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