Publicación:
Remarkable magnetostructural coupling around the magnetic transition in CeCo0.85Fe0.15Si

Cargando...
Miniatura

Tipo de recurso

ARTÍCULO CIENTÍFICO

Responsable institucional (informe)

Compilador

Diseñador

Contacto (informe)

Promotor

Titular

Inventor

Tutor de tesis

Solicitante

Afiliación

Fil.: Correa, V.F. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina; Universidad Nacional de Cuyo; Argentina
Fil.: Caroca-Canales, N. Max-Planck-Institut für Chemische Physik fester Stoffe; Alemania
Fil.: Betancourth, D. Correa, V.F.Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina; Universidad Nacional de Cuyo; Argentina
Fil.: Geibel, C. Max-Planck-Institut für Chemische Physik fester Stoffe; Alemania
Fil.: Sereni, J.G. Correa, V.F. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina; Universidad Nacional de Cuyo; Argentina

Sede CNEA

Centro Atómico Bariloche

Fecha de publicación

Fecha de creación

Idioma

eng

Nivel de accesibilidad

Proyectos de investigación

Unidades organizativas

Número de la revista

Resumen

We report a detailed study of the magnetic properties of CeCo0.85Fe0.15Si under high magnetic fields (up to 16 Tesla) measuring different physical properties such as specific heat, magnetization, electrical resistivity, thermal expansion and magnetostriction. CeCo0.85Fe0.15Si becomes antiferromagnetic at TN≈6.7K. However, a broad tail (onset at TX≈13K) in the specific heat precedes that second order transition. This tail is also observed in the temperature derivative of the resistivity. However, it is particularly noticeable in the thermal expansion coefficient where it takes the form of a large bump centered at TX. A high magnetic field practically washes out that tail in the resistivity. But surprisingly, the bump in the thermal expansion coefficient becomes a well pronounced peak fully split from the magnetic transition at TN. Concurrently, the magnetoresistance also switches from negative to positive above TN. The magnetostriction is considerable and irreversible at low temperature (∆L(16T)∼4x10-4 at 2 K) when the magnetic interactions dominate. A broad jump in the field dependence of the magnetostriction observed at low T may be the signature of a weak ongoing metamagnetic transition. Taking altogether the results indicate the importance of the lattice effects on the development of the magnetic order in these alloys.

Descripción

Palabras clave

Citación

V F Correa et al 2016 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 28 346003

Colecciones