976 resultados para Anisotropic exchange interaction
Resumo:
Bei der Untersuchung molekularer magnetischer Materialien spielen Metall-Radikal Verbindungen eine bedeutende Rolle. Ein Forschungsschwerpunkt stützt sich auf die Familie der Nitronyl-Nitroxid (NIT) Radikale, die sich durch eine hohe chemische Stabilität auszeichnen. Im sogenannten „Metall-Radikal Ansatz“ wurden die starken Austauschwechselwirkungen zwischen stabilen Radikalen und Übergangsmetallionen in mehrdimensionalen Netzwerken ausgiebig untersucht. Um diese Netzwerke mit NIT Radikalen aufzubauen, müssen zusätzliche funktionelle Gruppen, mit einem Abstand zur spintragenden Einheit, in das Molekül eingebaut werden. Dies kann zu einer zusätzlichen schwachen Spinaustauschwechselwirkung führen. Um diese Wechselwirkung zwischen Metalldimeren mit einem einzelnen Benzoat annalogen NIT-Radikal zu untersuchen, wurden dimere Mangan(II), Kobalt(II) und Zink(II) Komplexe mit dem Chelatliganden N,N,N',N'-Tetrakis(2-benzimid-azolylalkyl)-2-hydroxy-1,3-diamino-propan synthetisiert und zusätzlich über eine periphere Carboxylat Gruppe eines NIT Radikals verbrückt.rnDie Messungen der magnetischen Suszeptibilität weisen auf eine dominante antiferromagnetische Wechselwirkung in der Metall-Radikal Verbindung hin, bei der es sich um die Spin-Austauschwechselwirkung innerhalb des Metalldimers handelt. Durch den Vergleich mit analogen Nitrobenzoat- verbrückten Mangan(II) und Kobalt(II) Verbindungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass keine Metall-Radikal Wechselwirkung beobachtet wird, obwohl eine Wechselwirkung der pi*-orbitale mit den delokalisierten pi-System des Phenylrings durch Spin-Polarisation grundsätzlich möglich ist. Auch ESR - Messungen bestätigen dies, da der Spingrundzustand das anisotrope Signal des freien NIT Radikals aufweist. Das Radikal verhält sich somit wie ein isoliertes S=1/2 Spin-Zentrum, was zusätzlich durch DFT-Rechnungen bekräftigt werden konnte. Zusammenfassend führt also die Koordination eines NIT-Benzoats an ein antiferromagnetisch gekoppeltes Metalldimer nur zur Anhebung des Spingrundzustandes und hat keinen signifikanten Effekt auf die Austauschwechselwirkung. Um trotzdem eine Metall-Radikal Wechselwirkung beobachten zu können, ist es notwendig Koordinationsverbindungen zu synthetisieren in denen hohe Spingrundzustände besetzt werden. Dies trifft auf das analoge Kupferdimer zu, wofür eine ferromagnetische Wechselwirkung zu beobachten ist.rnNach den Regeln der Spin-Polarisation müsste die Verkürzung des Austauschpfades um eine Bindung zu einer Umkehrung des Vorzeichens der magnetischen Wechselwirkung führen. Diese Verkürzung kann man durch die Verwendung des alternativen stabilen NOA-Radikals (tert-Butyl Nitroxid) erreichen. Sowohl das NIT als auch das NOA-Radikal werden an ein Kupfer(II)-dimer koordiniert, das durch die Verwendung des oben erwähnten N6O-Liganden gebildet wurde. In der Modellverbindung, ohne einen paramagnetischen Substituenten am Benzoat, zeigen die Kupferionen eine ferromagnetische Wechselwirkung mit einem Triplett Grundzustand, dessen Existenz durch die Messung der magnetischen Suszeptibilität und ESR-Spektroskopie belegt werden kann. Aufgrund der nahezu identischen Koordinationsumgebung bleibt bei allen synthetisierten Verbindungen die Kupfer-Kupfer Wechselwirkung dabei gleich. Die Daten von ESR und magnetischen Messungen zeigen weiterhin auf eine signifikante zusätzliche Metall-Radikal Wechselwirkung hin. Bei der NIT-Verbindung ist diese Austauschwechselwirkung schwach antiferromagnetisch, während die NOA-Verbindung eine schwache ferromagnetische Kopplung aufzeigt. Diese Resultate können durch DFT Rechnungen bekräftigt werden. Der Vorzeichenwechsel des Kopplungsparameters kann durch die Verkürzung des Austauschpfades vom NIT zum NOA-Benzoat um eine Bindung erklärt werden. Durch die Wahl von geeigneten Radikal- Liganden und Metallionen, zeigt sich die Möglichkeit, Systeme zu erzeugen, in denen die Radikal-Metall Wechselwirkung auch über größere Distanzen den Spin-Grundzustand des gesamten Systems signifikant beeinflussen kann. die Anwendung dieses Konzeptes auf Metall-Radikal Cluster System sollte Von großem Interesse sein.rn
Resumo:
The executive - legislative relations in the Philippines have been described in two contrasting stories, namely the "strong president" story, and the "strong congress" story. This paper tries to consolidate the existing arguments and propose a new perspective focusing on the "compromise exchange" between the president and the congress across the different policy areas. It considers that the policy outcome is not brought by unilateral power of the president or the congress, but formed as the product of such an exchange. Interaction of powers and their complementary function are addressed. Furthermore, aside from the constitutional power, the weak party discipline is pointed out as a key factor in making the exchange possible.
Resumo:
The exchange interaction of Gd adjacent to Fe has been characterized by transport measurements on a double spin valve with a Fe/Gd/Fe trilayer as the middle layer. Our measurements show that the ferromagnetism of the Gd is enhanced by the presence of the Fe, and it remains ferromagnetic over its Curie temperature up to a thickness no smaller than 1 nm adjacent to the Fe. This thickness is more than double what has been reported before. Additionally, the saturation magnetization of the thin Gd layer sandwiched in Fe was found to be half of its bulk value. This reduced magnetization does not seem to be related to the proximity of Fe but rather to the incomplete saturation of Gd even for very high fields
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Motivated by applications to quantum computer architectures we study the change in the exchange interaction between neighbouring phosphorus donor electrons in silicon due to the application of voltage biases to surface control electrodes. These voltage biases create electro-static fields within the crystal substrate, perturbing the states of the donor electrons and thus altering the strength of the exchange interaction between them. We find that control gates of this kind can be used to either enhance or reduce the strength of the interaction, by an amount that depends both on the magnitude and orientation of the donor separation.
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The effect of antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations on two-dimensional quarter-filled systems is studied theoretically. An effective t-J(')-V model on a square lattice which accounts for checkerboard charge fluctuations and next-nearest-neighbor antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations is considered. From calculations based on large-N theory on this model it is found that the exchange interaction J(') increases the attraction between electrons in the d(xy) channel only, so that both charge and spin fluctuations work cooperatively to produce d(xy) pairing.
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LaCrO3 is a wide-band-gap insulator which does not evolve to a metallic state even after hole doping. We report electronic structure of this compound and its Sr substituents investigated by photoemission and inverse photoemission spectroscopies in conjunction with various calculations. The results show that LaCrO 3 is close to the Mott-Hubbard insulating regime with a gap of about 2.8 eV. Analysis of Cr 2p core-level spectrum suggests that the intra-atomic Coulomb interaction strength and the charge-transfer energy to be 5.0 and 5.5 eV, respectively, We also estimate the intra-atomic exchange interaction strength and a crystal-field splitting of about 0.7 and 2.0 eV, respectively. Sr substitution leading to hole doping in this system decreases the charge-excitation gap, but never collapses it to give a metallic behavior. The changes in the occupied as well as unoccupied spectral features are discussed in terms of the formation of local Cr4+ configurations arising from strong electron-phonon interactions.
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A comparative first principles study has been carried out for EuLiH3 (ELH) and EuTiO3 (ETO) using the generalized gradient approximation +U approach. While ELH exhibits ferromagnetic ground state for all volumes, the magnetic ground state of ETO has the tendency to switch from G-type antiferromagnetic to a ferromagnetic state with change in volume. The marked difference in magnetic behavior and magnitude of the nearest neighbors exchange interaction of both the compounds are shown to be related to the difference in their respective electronic structure near the Fermi level. The Ti 3d states are shown to play predominant role in weakening the strength of the exchange interaction in ETO.
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We have synthesized FINEMET type amorphous Fe73.5Cu1Mo3Si13.5-xAlxB9 alloy by the single wheel melt spinning technique. The effect of Al substitution on the magnetic properties has been studied using a vibrating sample magnetometer, SQUID and Mossbauer spectroscopy. Magnetization and Curie temperature of the amorphous phase of the alloys were found to decrease with A] concentration. The results are attributed to the dilution effect of At on the magnetic moment of Fe and to the increase in Fe-Fe interaction distance resulting in the weakening of exchange interaction. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Single-step low-temperature solution combustion (LCS) synthesis was adopted for the preparation of LaMnO3+ (LM) nanopowders. The powders were well characterized by powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS),surface area and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The PXRD of as-formed LM showed a cubic phase but, upon calcination (900degrees C, 6 h), it transformed into a rhombohedral phase. The effect of fuel on the formation of LM was examined, and its structure and magnetoresistance properties were investigated. Magnetoresistance (MR) measurements on LM were carried out at 0, 1, 4 and 7 T between 300 and 10 K. LM (fuel-to-oxidizer ratio; = 1) showed an MR of 17% at 1 T, whereas, for 4 and 7 T, it exhibited an MR of 45 and 55%, respectively, near the TM-I. Metallic resistivity data below TM-I showed that the double exchange interaction played a major role in this compound. It was interesting to observe that the sample calcined at 1200 degrees C for 3 h exhibited insulator behavior.
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Nonconventional heptacoordination in combination with efficient magnetic exchange coupling is shown to yield a 1-D heteronuclear {(FeNbIV)-Nb-II} compound with remarkable magnetic features when compared to other Fe(II)-based single chain magnets (SCM). Cyano-bridged heterometallic {3d-4d} and {3d-5d} chains are formed upon assembling Fe(II) bearing a pentadentate macrocycle as the blocking ligand with octacyano metallates, [M(CN)(8)](4-) (M = Nb-IV, Mo-IV, W-IV.) X-ray diffraction (single-crystal and powder) measurements reveal that the [{(H2O)Fe(L-1)}{M(CN)(8)}{Fe(L-1)}](infinity) architectures consist of isomorphous 1-D polymeric structures based on the alternation of {Fe(L-1)}(2+) and {M(CN)(8)}(4-) units (L-1 stands for the pentadentate macrocycle). Analysis of the magnetic susceptibility behavior revealed cyano-bridged {Fe-Nb} exchange interaction to be antiferromagnetic with J = -20 cm(-1) deduced from fitting an Ising model taking into account the noncollinear spin arrangement. For this ferrimagnetic chain a slow relaxation of its magnetization is observed at low temperature revealing a SCM behavior with Delta/k(B) = 74 K and tau(0) = 4.6 x 10(-11) s. The M versus H behavior exhibits a hysteresis loop with a coercive field of 4 kOe at 1 K and reveals at 380 mK magnetic avalanche processes, i.e., abrupt reversals in magnetization as H is varied. The origin of these characteristics is attributed to the combination of efficient {Fe-Nb} exchange interaction and significant anisotropy of the {Fe(L-1)) unit. High field EPR and magnetization experiments have revealed for the parent compound [Fe(L-1)(H2O)(2)]Cl-2 a negative zero field splitting parameter of D approximate to -17 cm(-1). The crystal structure, magnetic behavior, and Mossbauer data for [Fe(L-1)(H2O)(2)]Cl-2 are also reported.
Resumo:
Nonconventional heptacoordination in combination with efficient magnetic exchange coupling is shown to yield a 1-D heteronuclear {(FeNbIV)-Nb-II} compound with remarkable magnetic features when compared to other Fe(II)-based single chain magnets (SCM). Cyano-bridged heterometallic {3d-4d} and {3d-5d} chains are formed upon assembling Fe(II) bearing a pentadentate macrocycle as the blocking ligand with octacyano metallates, [M(CN)(8)](4-) (M = Nb-IV, Mo-IV, W-IV.) X-ray diffraction (single-crystal and powder) measurements reveal that the [{(H2O)Fe(L-1)}{M(CN)(8)}{Fe(L-1)}](infinity) architectures consist of isomorphous 1-D polymeric structures based on the alternation of {Fe(L-1)}(2+) and {M(CN)(8)}(4-) units (L-1 stands for the pentadentate macrocycle). Analysis of the magnetic susceptibility behavior revealed cyano-bridged {Fe-Nb} exchange interaction to be antiferromagnetic with J = -20 cm(-1) deduced from fitting an Ising model taking into account the noncollinear spin arrangement. For this ferrimagnetic chain a slow relaxation of its magnetization is observed at low temperature revealing a SCM behavior with Delta/k(B) = 74 K and tau(0) = 4.6 x 10(-11) s. The M versus H behavior exhibits a hysteresis loop with a coercive field of 4 kOe at 1 K and reveals at 380 mK magnetic avalanche processes, i.e., abrupt reversals in magnetization as H is varied. The origin of these characteristics is attributed to the combination of efficient {Fe-Nb} exchange interaction and significant anisotropy of the {Fe(L-1)) unit. High field EPR and magnetization experiments have revealed for the parent compound [Fe(L-1)(H2O)(2)]Cl-2 a negative zero field splitting parameter of D approximate to -17 cm(-1). The crystal structure, magnetic behavior, and Mossbauer data for [Fe(L-1)(H2O)(2)]Cl-2 are also reported.
Resumo:
Two distinct ferromagnetic phases of LaMn0.5Co0.5O3 having monoclinic structure with distinct physical properties have been studied. The ferromagnetic ordering temperature T-c is found to be different for both the phases. The origin of such contrasting characteristics is assigned to the changes in the distance(s) and angle(s) between Mn-O-Co resulting from distortions observed from neutron diffraction studies. Investigations on the temperature dependent Raman spectroscopy provide evidence for such structural characteristics, which affects the exchange interaction. The difference in B-site ordering which is evident from the neutron diffraction is also responsible for the difference in T-c. Raman scattering suggests the presence of spin-phonon coupling for both the phases around the T-c. Electrical transport properties of both the phases have been investigated based on the lattice distortion.
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We have examined the stability of the ferromagnetic (FM) state in CaRuO3 and SrRuO3 as a function of the GdFeO3 distortion. Model calculations predict the dependence of the FM transition temperature (T-c) on the rotation angle theta to vary as cos(2)(2 theta) for e(g)-electron systems. However, here, we find an initial increase and then the expected decrease. Furthermore, a much faster decrease is found than predicted for e(g)-electron systems. Considering the specific case of CaRuO3, a larger deviation of the Ru-O-Ru angle from 180 degrees in CaRuO3 as compared to SrRuO3 should result in a more reduced bandwidth, thereby making the former more correlated. The absence of long-range magnetic order in the more correlated CaRuO3 is traced to the strong collapse of various exchange interaction strengths that arises primarily from the volume reduction and increased distortion of the RuO6 octahedra network that accompanies the presence of a smaller ion at the A site.
Resumo:
The discovery of giant magnetoresistance (GMR) in rare earth manganates of the general formula Ln(1-x)A(x)MnO(3) (Ln = rare earth, A = divalent cation) has aroused much interest not only because of its technological implications, but also due to the fascinating features and mechanism of the phenomemon in these oxides. GMR is observed in these manganates when they become ferromagnetic and transform from an insulating state to a metallic state close to the Curie temperature. The essential features of magnetoresistance in the manganates can be understood on the basis of the double-exchange mechanism, but this is too simplistic to account for all the observed data. The most curious property of the manganates relates to the high resistivity exhibited in the so-called metallic state. Charge ordering competes with the double-exchange interaction responsible for ferromagnetism and GMR in these materials. The charge-ordered (charge-crystal) insulating state in the rare earth manganates can be melted into a metallic and ferromagnetic charge-liquid state by applying a magnetic field, thus providing a unique case of charge and spin separation in solids. The observation of GMR in Tl2Mn2O7 shows that there can be causes other than double-exchange for the phenomenon.