RESUMEN
We have discovered room-temperature low-field colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) in an A-site ordered NdBaMn_{2}O_{6} crystal. The resistance changes more than 2 orders of magnitude at a magnetic field lower than 2 T near 300 K. When the temperature and magnetic field sweep from an insulating (metallic) phase to a metallic (insulating) phase, the insulating (metallic) conduction changes to the metallic (insulating) conduction within 1 K and 0.5 T, respectively. The CMR is ascribed to the melting of the charge and orbital ordering. The entropy change which is estimated from the B-T phase diagram is smaller than what is expected for the charge and orbital ordering. The suppression of the entropy change is attributable to the loss of the short-range ferromagnetic fluctuation of Mn spin moments, which is an important key of the high temperature and low magnetic field CMR effect.
RESUMEN
Fedotovite K_{2}Cu_{3}O(SO_{4})_{3} is a candidate of new quantum spin systems, in which the edge-shared tetrahedral (EST) spin clusters consisting of Cu^{2+} are connected by weak intercluster couplings forming a one-dimensional array. Comprehensive experimental studies by magnetic susceptibility, magnetization, heat capacity, and inelastic neutron scattering measurements reveal the presence of an effective S=1 Haldane state below Tâ 4 K. Rigorous theoretical studies provide an insight into the magnetic state of K_{2}Cu_{3}O(SO_{4})_{3}: an EST cluster makes a triplet in the ground state and a one-dimensional chain of the EST induces a cluster-based Haldane state. We predict that the cluster-based Haldane state emerges whenever the number of tetrahedra in the EST is even.
RESUMEN
Magnetic and structural phase diagram in a spinel-type solid solution system Fe(1-x)Mn(x)Cr(2)O(4) has been investigated. The cubic-to-tetragonal transition temperature T(s 1) is gradually reduced by the substitution of Mn(2+) (3d(5)) for Jahn-Teller-active Fe(2+) (3d(6)) ions, implying the long-range nature of the ferroic interaction between orbitals. In the paramagnetic tetragonal phase for x < 0.5, the c parameter is shorter than a because of the anharmonicity of the elastic energy. The crystal structure further changes to orthorhombic at around the ferrimagnetic transition temperature T(N 1). T(s 1) and T(N 1) meet at x = 0.5, and Mn substitution of more than 0.5 gives rise to another tetragonal phase with a < c. The systematic change in crystal structure is discussed in terms of competition between the anharmonic lattice potential and the intra-atomic spin-orbit interaction at Fe(2+).
RESUMEN
TbMnO(3) exhibits a spontaneous electric polarization along c concomitantly with a spiral spin ordering modulated along b below T_{C} = 28 K. We have performed inelastic x-ray scattering measurements on a single crystal of TbMnO(3) to clarify whether phonon anomalies related to the ferroelectricity exist. We measured transverse modes, especially the Mn-O-Mn bending mode polarized along c and propagating along b, which we expect is most relevant to the ferroelectricity. However, no anomaly was found in the phonon dispersion below 50 meV across T_{C}. The present result suggests that the mechanism of ferroelectricity in TbMnO(3) is different from that of a conventional displacive-type ferroelectric. The weak coupling between electric polarization and lattice in TbMnO(3) strongly suggests that the ferroelectricity is mainly derived from the spiral spin ordering.
RESUMEN
The ferroelectric state in an orthorhombic perovskite RMnO3 (R=Gd0.7Tb0.3) was proved by neutron scattering studies to show the cycloidal spin state with the ab-spiral plane and the spin-helicity dependent polarization vector along the a axis, sharing the microscopic origin (inverse Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction) with the more widely observed P||c state (e.g., for R=Tb and Dy) with the bc-spiral plane. The magnetic-field induced polarization flop from P||c to P||a as well known for RMnO3 is thus assigned to the orthogonal flop of the spin spiral plane from bc to ab.
RESUMEN
Magnetic ferroelectrics or multiferroics, which are currently extensively explored, may provide a good arena to realize a novel magnetoelectric function. Here we demonstrate the genuine electric control of the spiral magnetic structure in one such magnetic ferroelectric, TbMnO3. A spin-polarized neutron scattering experiment clearly shows that the spin helicity, clockwise or counterclockwise, is controlled by the direction of spontaneous polarization and hence by the polarity of the small electric field applied on cooling.