Neutron scattering experiments have been performed on the ternary rare-earth
diborocarbide Ce11B2C2. The powder diffraction experiment confirms
formation of a long-range magnetic order at TN=7.3 K, where a
sinusoidally modulated structure is realized with the modulation vector q=[0.167(3),0.167(3),0.114(3)]. Inelastic excitation spectra in the
paramagnetic phase comprise significantly broad quasielastic and inelastic
peaks centered at ℏω≈0,8 and 65 meV.
Crystalline-electric-field (CEF) analysis satisfactorily reproduces the
observed spectra, confirming their CEF origin. The broadness of the
quasielastic peak indicates strong spin fluctuations due to coupling between
localized 4f spins and conduction electrons in the paramagnetic phase. A
prominent feature is suppression of the quasielastic fluctuations, and
concomitant growth of a sharp inelastic peak in a low energy region below
TN. This suggests dissociation of the conduction and localized 4f
electrons on ordering, and contrasts the presently observed incommensurate
phase with spin-density-wave order frequently seen in heavy fermion compounds,
such as Ce(Ru1−xLax)2Si2.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.