225 research outputs found
Does EELS haunt your photoemission measurements?
It has been argued in a recent paper by R. Joynt (R. Joynt, Science 284, p
777 (1999)) that in the case of poorly conducting solids the photoemission
spectrum close to the Fermi Energy may be strongly influenced by extrinsic loss
processes similar to those occurring in High Resolution Electron Energy Loss
Spectroscopy (HR-EELS), thereby obscuring information concerning the density of
states or one electron Green's function sought for. In this paper we present a
number of arguments, both theoretical and experimental, that demonstrate that
energy loss processes occurring once the electron is outside the solid,
contribute only weakly to the spectrum and can in most cases be either
neglected or treated as a weak structureless background.Comment: 6 pages, figures included. Submitted to PR
Static magnetic susceptibility, crystal field and exchange interactions in rare earth titanate pyrochlores
The experimental temperature dependence (T = 2–300 K) of single crystal bulk and site susceptibilities of rare earth titanate pyrochlores R2Ti2O7 (R = Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Yb) is analyzed in the framework of crystal field theory and a mean field approximation. Analytical expressions for the site and bulk susceptibilities of the pyrochlore lattice are derived taking into account long range dipole–dipole interactions and anisotropic exchange interactions between the nearest neighbor rare earth ions. The sets of crystal field parameters and anisotropic exchange coupling constants have been determined and their variations along the lanthanide series are discussed.
Reentrant spin glass behavior in a layered manganite La1.2Sr1.8Mn2O7 single crystals
We report here a detailed study of AC/DC magnetization and
longitudinal/transverse transport properties of
LaSrMnO single crystals below = 121 K. We
find that the resistivity upturn below 40 K is related to the reentrant spin
glass phase at the same temperature, accompanied by additional anomalous Hall
effects. The carrier concentration from the ordinary Hall effects remains
constant during the transition and is close to the nominal doping level (0.4
holes/Mn). The spin glass behavior comes from the competition between
ferromagnetic double exchange and antiferromagnetic superexchange interactions,
which leads to phase separation, i.e. a mixture of ferromagnetic and
antiferromagnetic clusters, representing the canted antiferromagnetic state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
(Sr/Ca)_{14}Cu_{24}O_{41} spin ladders studied by NMR under pressure
(63)Cu-NMR measurements have been performed on two-leg hole-doped spin
ladders Sr_{14-x}Ca_{x}Cu_{24}O_{41} single crystals (0-x-12) at several
pressures up to the pressure domain where the stabilization of a
superconducting ground state can be achieved. The data reveal marked decrease
of the spin gap derived from Knight shift measurements upon Ca substitution and
also under pressure and confirm the onset of low lying spin excitations around
P_{c} as previously reported. The spin gap in Sr_{2}Ca_{12}Cu_{24}O_{41} is
strongly reduced above 20 kbar. However, the data of an experiment performed at
P=36 kbar where superconductivity has been detected at 6.7K by an inductive
technique have shown that a significant amount of spin excitations remains
gapped at 80K when superconductivity sets in. The standard relaxation model
with two and three-magnon modes explains fairly well the activated relaxation
data in the intermediate temperature regime corresponding to gapped spin
excitations using the spin gap data derived from Knight shift experiments.The
data of Gaussian relaxation rates of heavily doped samples support the
limitation of the coherence lenght at low temperature by the average distance
between doped holes. We discuss the interplay between superconductivity and the
spin gap and suggest that these new results support the exciting prospect of
superconductivity induced by the interladder tunnelling of preformed pairs as
long as the pressure remains lower than the pressure corresponding to the
maximum of the superconducting critical temperature.Comment: 15 pages Latex, 13 figures. to be published in Eur.Phys.Jour.B,200
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