ABSTRACT
Quantum materials that feature magnetic long-range order often reveal complex phase diagrams when localized electrons become mobile. In many materials magnetism is rapidly suppressed as electronic charges dissolve into the conduction band. In materials where magnetism persists, it is unclear how the magnetic properties are affected. Here we study the evolution of the magnetic structure in Nd_{1-x}Ce_{x}CoIn_{5} from the localized to the highly itinerant limit. We observe two magnetic ground states inside a heavy-fermion phase that are detached from unconventional superconductivity. The presence of two different magnetic phases provides evidence that increasing charge delocalization affects the magnetic interactions via anisotropic band hybridization.
ABSTRACT
The magnetic and crystal structures of manganese and nickel monoxides have been studied using high-resolution neutron diffraction. The known 1k-structures based on the single propagation vector [½ ½ ½] for the parent paramagnetic space group Fm3m are forced to have monoclinic magnetic symmetry and are not possible in rhombohedral symmetry. However, the monoclinic distortions from the rhombohedral crystal metric allowed by symmetry are very small, and the explicit monoclinic splittings of the diffraction peaks have not been experimentally observed. We analyse the magnetic crystallographic models metrically compatible with our experimental data in full detail by using isotropy subgroup representation approach, including rhombohedral solutions based on the propagation vector star {[½ ½ ½], [-½ ½ ½], [½-½ ½], [½ ½ -½]}. Although the full star rhombohedral RI3c structure can equally well fit our diffraction data for NiO, we conclude that the best solution for the crystal and magnetic structures for NiO and MnO is the 1k monoclinic model with the magnetic space group Cc2/c (Belov-Neronova-Smirnova No. 15.90, UNI symbol C2/c.1'c[C2/m]).
ABSTRACT
A report from the International Union of Crystallography Commission on Magnetic Structures outlining the recommendations for communicating commensurate magnetic structures.
ABSTRACT
We report the observation of a stepwise "melting" of the low-temperature Na-vacancy order in the layered transition-metal oxide Na0.7CoO2. High-resolution neutron powder diffraction analysis indicates the existence of two first-order structural transitions, one at T1≈290 K followed by a second at T2≈400 K. Detailed analysis strongly suggests that both transitions are linked to changes in the Na mobility. Our data are consistent with a two-step disappearance of Na-vacancy order through the successive opening of first quasi-1D (T1>T>T2) and then 2D (T>T2) Na diffusion paths. These results shed new light on previous, seemingly incompatible, experimental interpretations regarding the relationship between Na-vacancy order and Na dynamics in this material. They also represent an important step towards the tuning of physical properties and the design of tailored functional materials through an improved control and understanding of ionic diffusion.
ABSTRACT
We introduce a novel method for local structure determination with a spatial resolution of the order of 0.01 Å. It can be applied to materials containing clusters of exchange-coupled magnetic atoms. We use neutron spectroscopy to probe the energies of the cluster excitations which are determined by the interatomic coupling strength J. Since for most materials J is related to the interatomic distance R through a linear relation dJ/dR=α (for dR/Râª1), we can directly derive the local distance R from the observed excitation energies. This is exemplified for the mixed one-dimensional paramagnetic compound CsMn(x)Mg(1-x)Br3 (x=0.05,0.10) containing manganese dimers oriented along the hexagonal c axis. Surprisingly, the resulting Mn-Mn distances R do not vary continuously with increasing internal pressure but lock in at some discrete values.
ABSTRACT
We report on muon-spin rotation and relaxation (µSR), electrical resistivity, magnetization and differential scanning calorimetry measurements performed on a high-quality single crystal of Cs(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2). Whereas our transport and magnetization data confirm the bulk character of the superconducting state below T(c)=29.6(2) K, the µSR data indicate that the system is magnetic below T(N)=478.5(3) K, where a first-order transition occurs. The first-order character of the magnetic transition is confirmed by differential scanning calorimetry data. Taken all together, these data indicate in Cs(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2) a microscopic coexistence between the superconducting phase and a strong magnetic phase. The observed T(N) is the highest reported to date for a magnetic superconductor.
ABSTRACT
Ti(2)(Ti(0.16)Ni(0.43)Al(0.41))(3) is a novel compound (labeled as τ(6)) in the Ti-rich region of the Ti-Ni-Al system in a limited temperature range 870 < T < 980 °C. The structure of τ(6)-Ti(2)(Ti,Ni,Al)(3) was solved from a combined analysis of X-ray single crystal and neutron powder diffracton data (space group C2/m, a = 1.85383(7) nm, b = 0.49970(2) nm, c = 0.81511(3) nm, and ß = 99.597(3)°). τ(6)-Ti(2)(Ti,Ni,Al)(3) as a variant of the V(2)(Co(0.57)Si(0.43))(3)-type is a combination of slabs of the MgZn(2)-Laves type and slabs of the Zr(4)Al(3)-type forming a tetrahedrally close-packed Frank-Kasper structure with pentagon-triangle main layers. Titanium atoms occupy the vanadium sites, but Ti/Ni/Al atoms randomly share the (Co/Si) sites of V(2)(Co(0.57)Si(0.43))(3). Although τ(6) shows a random replacement on 6 of the 11 atom sites, it has no significant homogeneity range (~1 at. %). The composition of τ(6) changes slightly with temperature. DSC/DTA runs (1 K/min) were not sufficient to define proper reaction temperatures due to slow reaction kinetics. Therefore, phase equilibria related to τ(6) were derived from X-ray powder diffraction in combination with EPMA on alloys, which were annealed at carefully set temperatures and quenched. τ(6) forms from a peritectoid reaction η-(Ti,Al)(2)Ni + τ(3) + α(2) â τ(6) at 980 °C and decomposes in a eutectoid reaction τ(6) â η + τ(4) + α(2) at 870 °C. Both reactions involve the η-(Ti,Al)(2)Ni phase, for which the atom distribution was derived from X-ray single crystal intensity data, revealing Ti/Al randomly sharing the 48f- and 16c-positions in space group Fd3Ì m (Ti(2)Ni-type, a = 1.12543(3) nm). There was no residual electron density at the octahedral centers of the crystal structure ruling out impurity stabilization. Phase equilibria involving the τ(6) phase have been established for various temperatures (T = 865, 900, 925, 950, 975 °C, and subsolidus). The reaction isotherms concerning the τ(6) phase have been established and are summarized in a Schultz-Scheil diagram.
ABSTRACT
Temperature-dependent synchrotron powder diffraction on Cs(0.83)(Fe(0.86)Se)(2) revealed first-order I4/m to I4/mmm structural transformation around 216 °C associated with a disorder of the Fe vacancies. Irreversibility observed during the transition is likely associated with a mobility of the intercalated alkali atoms. Pressure-dependent synchrotron powder diffraction on Cs(0.83)(Fe(1-y)Se)(2), Rb(0.85)(Fe(1-y)Se)(2), and K(0.8)(Fe(1-y)Se)(2) (y ~ 0.14) indicated that the I4/m superstructure reflections are present up to pressures of 120 kbar. This may indicate that the ordering of the Fe vacancies is present in both superconducting and nonsuperconductive states.
ABSTRACT
We report on the synthesis of large single crystals of a new FeSe layer superconductor Cs(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2). X-ray powder diffraction, neutron powder diffraction and magnetization measurements have been used to compare the crystal structure and the magnetic properties of Cs(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2) with those of the recently discovered potassium intercalated system K(x)Fe(2)Se(2). The new compound, Cs(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2), shows a slightly lower superconducting transition temperature (T(c) = 27.4 K) in comparison to 29.5 in (K(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2)). The volume of the crystal unit cell increases by replacing K by Cs-the c parameter grows from 14.1353(13) to 15.2846(11) Å. For the alkali metal intercalated layered compounds known so far, (K(0.8)Fe(2)Se(2) and Cs(0.8)(FeSe(0.98))(2)), the T(c) dependence on the anion height (distance between Fe layers and Se layers) was found to be analogous to those reported for As-containing Fe superconductors and Fe(Se(1 - x)Ch(x)), where Ch = Te, S.
ABSTRACT
The magnetic ground states in highly ordered double perovskites LaSr1-xCaxNiReO6 (x = 0.0, 0.5, 1.0) are studied in view of the Goodenough-Kanamori rules of superexchange interactions in this paper. In LaSrNiReO6, Ni and Re sublattices are found to exhibit curious magnetic states separately, but no long range magnetic ordering is achieved. The magnetic transition at ~255 K is identified with the independent Re sublattice magnetic ordering. Interestingly, the sublattice interactions are tuned by modifying the Ni-O-Re bond angles through Ca doping. Upon Ca doping, the Ni and Re sublattices start to display a ferrimagnetically ordered state at low temperature. The neutron powder diffraction data reveals long range ferrimagnetic ordering of the Ni and Re magnetic sublattices along the crystallographic b-axis. The transition temperature of the ferrimagnetic phase increases monotonically with increasing Ca concentration.
ABSTRACT
A high-temperature neutron diffraction study has been carried out on La(0.75)Sr(0.25)CrO(3) compound in the temperature range 300-1400 K. On doping the parent compound LaCrO(3) with Sr at the La site, the orthorhombic (Pbnm) to rhombohedral ([Formula: see text]) structural transition shifts to lower temperatures. From quantitative Rietveld analysis it is found unequivocally that there is a two-phase coexistence (orthorhombic and rhombohedral phases with â¼89 and 11 weight%, respectively) in the temperature range 300-470 K and a three-phase coexistence (with a new cubic phase with space group Pm3m) in the temperature range 480-1400 K. The weight percentages of the orthorhombic, rhombohedral and cubic phases were found to be â¼49%, 37% and 14%, respectively, in the temperature range 480-1300 K, while over 1350-1400 K, the average weight percentages of orthorhombic, rhombohedral and cubic phases were found to be â¼41%, 41% and 18%, respectively. The coefficients of volume thermal expansion and linear thermal expansion have been determined for all three phases. The importance of the present study has been discussed for practical applications of the studied compound in solid oxide fuel cells.
ABSTRACT
Caloric effects are currently under intense study due to the prospect of environment-friendly cooling applications. Most of the research is centred on large magnetocaloric effects and large electrocaloric effects, but the former require large magnetic fields that are challenging to generate economically and the latter require large electric fields that can only be applied without breakdown in thin samples. Here we use small changes in hydrostatic pressure to drive giant inverse barocaloric effects near the ferrielectric phase transition in ammonium sulphate. We find barocaloric effects and strengths that exceed those previously observed near magnetostructural phase transitions in magnetic materials. Our findings should therefore inspire the discovery of giant barocaloric effects in a wide range of unexplored ferroelectric materials, ultimately leading to barocaloric cooling devices.
ABSTRACT
We report superconductivity at T(c) ≈ 2.6 K in a new layered bismuth oxyselenide LaO(0.5)F(0.5)BiSe2 with the ZrCuSiAs-type structure composed of alternating superconducting BiSe2 and blocking LaO layers. The superconducting properties of LaO(0.5)F(0.5)BiSe2 were investigated by means of dc magnetization, resistivity and muon-spin rotation experiments, revealing the appearance of bulk superconductivity with a rather large superconducting volume fraction of ≈ 70% at 1.8 K.
Subject(s)
Bismuth/chemistry , Electric Conductivity , Fluorides/chemistry , Lanthanum/chemistry , Oxides/chemistry , Selenium Compounds/chemistry , Molecular StructureABSTRACT
Powder SrPrZnRuO6, SrPrCoRuO6, SrPrMgRuO6 and SrPrNiRuO6 double perovskites were synthesized by the solid-state reaction method, and their crystal structure was investigated by Rietveld analysis (using the symmetry-mode procedure) by x-ray, synchrotron and neutron powder diffraction data. SrPrMRuO6 materials are monoclinic perovskites at room temperature, adopting the space group P21/n, [Formula: see text], c ≈ 2ap, Z = 2. The unit cell parameters increase through the series as the B-cation size increases. The tilting of the octahedra is associated with irreducible representations GM(+)4 and X(+)3. In the studied series, Sr(2+)/Pr(3+) are in eight-fold coordination and are displaced from the center of the Sr/PrO8 polyhedron along [010] by the X(+)5(A10) mode. The size of the first coordination sphere of Sr/Pr increases and the second coordination sphere reduces with temperature, suggesting an actual change in coordination. While changing the interatomic distances, the distortion of the structure diminishes, as observed in distortion mode amplitudes and octahedral tilt angles. The temperature driven [Formula: see text] phase transition was observed for Ni and Mg materials at ≈1025 K and 950 K, respectively. Tilting of the octahedra in the trigonal phase is associated with GM(+)4, which is the unique active mode associated with the not experimentally observed [Formula: see text] phase transition.
ABSTRACT
BaFe2Se3 (Pnma, CsAg2I3-type structure), recently assumed to show superconductivity at ~11 K, exhibits a pressure-dependent structural transition to the CsCu2Cl3-type structure (Cmcm space group) around 60 kbar, as evidenced from pressure-dependent synchrotron powder diffraction data. Temperature-dependent synchrotron powder diffraction data indicate an evolution of the room-temperature BaFe2Se3 structure towards a high-symmetry CsCu2Cl3 form upon heating. Around 425 K BaFe2Se3 undergoes a reversible, first-order isostructural transition, which is supported by the differential scanning calorimetry data. The temperature-dependent structural changes occur in two stages, as determined by the alignment of the FeSe4 tetrahedra and corresponding adjustments of the positions of Ba atoms. On further heating, a second-order phase transformation into the Cmcm structure is observed at 660 K. A rather unusual combination of isostructural and second-order phase transformations is parameterized within phenomenological theory assuming high-order expansion of the Landau potential. A generic phase diagram mapping observed structures is proposed on the basis of the parameterization.
ABSTRACT
The long-range magnetic ordering of PrMn(2)O(5) has been studied on polycrystalline samples from neutron diffraction and specific heat measurements. The onset of antiferromagnetic ordering is observed at T(N) ≈ 25 K. In the temperature interval 18 K < T < 25 K the magnetic structure is defined by the propagation vector k(1) = (1/2,0,0). Below 18 K, some additional magnetic satellites appear in the NPD patterns, which are indexed with k(2) = (0,0,1/2). Therefore, below 18 K the magnetic structure consists of two independent magnetic domains, defined by the propagation vectors k(1) and k(2). The magnetic structure of the k(1)-domain is given by the basis vectors (C(x),0,0) and (C(x)',0,0) for Mn(4h) and Mn(4f), respectively. In the k(2)-domain, the magnetic structure is defined by the basis vectors (0,0,G(z)) and (F(x)',G(y)',0) for Mn(4h) and Mn(4f), respectively. At T = 1.5 K, for the magnetic phase associated with k(1), the magnetic moments of the Mn atoms at the 4h and 4f sites are 1.82(7) and 1.81(6) µ(B), respectively; for the magnetic phase associated with k(2), the magnetic moments for the Mn(4h) and Mn(4f) atoms are 0.59(5) and 2.62(5) µ(B), respectively.
ABSTRACT
We report a neutron diffraction study of the magnetic phase transitions in the charge-density wave (CDW) TbTe(3) compound. We discover that in the paramagnetic phase there are strong 2D-like magnetic correlations, consistent with the pronounced anisotropy of the chemical structure. A long-range incommensurate magnetic order emerges in TbTe(3) at T(mag1) = 5.78 K as a result of continuous phase transitions. We observe that near the temperature T(mag1) the magnetic Bragg peaks appear around the position (0, 0, 0.24) (or its rational multiples), that is fairly close to the propagation vector (0,0,0.29) associated with the CDW phase transition in TbTe(3). This suggests that correlations leading to the long-range magnetic order in TbTe(3) are linked to the modulations that occur in the CDW state.
ABSTRACT
The crystal and magnetic structures of the superconducting iron-based chalcogenides Rb(y)Fe(2-x)Se(2) have been studied by means of single-crystal synchrotron x-ray and high-resolution neutron powder diffraction in the temperature range 2-570 K. The ground state of the crystal is an intrinsically phase-separated state with two distinct-by-symmetry phases. The main phase has the iron vacancy ordered â5 × â5 superstructure (I4/m space group) with AFM ordered Fe spins. The minority phase does not have â5 × â5-type of ordering and has a smaller in-plane lattice constant a and larger tetragonal c-axis and can be well described by assuming the parent average vacancy disordered structure (I4/mmm space group) with the refined stoichiometry Rb(0.60(5))(Fe(1.10(5))Se)(2). The minority phase amounts to 8-10% mass fraction. The unit cell volume of the minority phase is 3.2% smaller than the one of the main phase at T = 2 K and has quite different temperature dependence. The minority phase merges with the main vacancy ordered phase on heating above the phase separation temperature T(P) = 475 K. The spatial dimensions of the phase domains strongly increase above T(P) from 1000 to >2500 Å due to the integration of the regions of the main phase that were separated by the second phase at low temperatures. Additional annealing of the crystals at a temperature T = 488 K, close to T(P), for a long time drastically reduces the amount of the minority phase.
ABSTRACT
We report on a new iron selenide superconductor with a T(c) onset of 45 K and the nominal composition Li(x)(C(5)H(5)N)(y)Fe(2-z)Se(2), synthesized via intercalation of dissolved alkaline metal in anhydrous pyridine at room temperature. This superconductor exhibits a broad transition, reaching zero resistance at 10 K. Magnetization measurements reveal a superconducting shielding fraction of approximately 30%. Analogous phases intercalated with Na, K and Rb were also synthesized and characterized. The superconducting transition temperature of Li(x)(C(5)H(5)N)(y)Fe(2-z)Se(2) is clearly enhanced in comparison to those of the known superconductors FeSe(0.98) (T(c) ~ 8 K) and A(x)Fe(2-y)Se(2) (T(c) ~ 27-32 K) and is in close agreement with critical temperatures recently reported for Li(x)(NH(3))(y)Fe(2-z)Se(2). Post-annealing of intercalated material (Li(x)(C(5)H(5)N)(y)Fe(2-z)Se(2)) at elevated temperatures drastically enlarges the c-parameter of the unit cell (~44%) and increases the superconducting shielding fraction to nearly 100%. Our findings indicate a new synthesis route leading to possibly even higher critical temperatures for materials in this class: by intercalation of organic compounds between Fe-Se layers.
ABSTRACT
Magnetic and crystal structures of superconducting X(y)Fe(2-x)Se2 (X = Rb and K with T(c) = 31.5 and 29.5 K) have been studied by neutron powder diffraction at room temperature. Both crystals show an ordered iron vacancy pattern and the crystal structure is well described by the I4/m space group with the lattice constants a = 8.799, c = 14.576 and a = 8.730, c = 14.115 Å and the refined stoichiometry x = 0.30(1), y = 0.83(2) and x = 0.34(1), y = 0.83(1) for Rb and K crystals, respectively. The structure contains one fully occupied iron position and one almost empty vacancy position. Assuming that the iron moment is ordered only on the fully occupied site we have sorted out all eight irreducible representations (irreps) for the propagation vector k = 0 and have found that irreps τ2 and τ7 fit the experimental data well with the moments along the c axis. The moment amplitudes amounted to 2.15(3) µ(B), 2.55(3) µ(B) for τ2 and 2.08(6) µ(B), 2.57(3) µ(B) for τ7 for Rb and K crystals, respectively. Irrep τ2 corresponds to the Shubnikov group I4/m' and gives a constant moment antiferromagnetic configuration, whereas τ7 does not have a Shubnikov counterpart and allows two different magnetic moments in the structure.