647 research outputs found
Thermal Conductivity, Thermopower, and Figure of Merit of La_{1-x}Sr_xCoO_3
We present a study of the thermal conductivity k and the thermopower S of
single crystals of La_{1-x}Sr_xCoO_3 with 0<= x <= 0.3. For all Sr
concentrations La_{1-x}Sr_xCoO_3 has rather low k values, whereas S strongly
changes as a function of x. We discuss the influence of the temperature- and
the doping-induced spin-state transitions of the Co ions on both, S and k. From
S, k, and the electrical resistivity rho we derive the thermoelectric figure of
merit Z=S^2/(k*rho). For intermediate Sr concentrations we find notably large
values of Z indicating that Co-based materials could be promising candidates
for thermoelectric cooling.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures included, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Thermal conductivity of R2CuO4, with R = La, Pr and Gd
We present measurements of the in-plane kappa_ab and out-of-plane kappa_c
thermal conductivity of Pr2CuO4 and Gd2CuO4 single crystals. The anisotropy
gives strong evidence for a large contribution of magnetic excitations to
kappa_ab i.e. for a heat current within the CuO2 planes. However, the absolute
values of kappa_mag are lower than previous results on La2CuO4. These
differences probably arise from deviations from the nominal oxygen
stoichiometry. This has a drastic influence on kappa_mag, which is shown by an
investigation of a La2CuO4+delta polycrystal.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure; presented at SCES200
Spin-State Transition and Metal-Insulator Transition in LaEuCoO}
We present a study of the structure, the electric resistivity, the magnetic
susceptibility, and the thermal expansion of LaEuCoO. LaCoO
shows a temperature-induced spin-state transition around 100 K and a
metal-insulator transition around 500 K. Partial substitution of La by
the smaller Eu causes chemical pressure and leads to a drastic increase
of the spin gap from about 190 K in LaCoO to about 2000 K in EuCoO, so
that the spin-state transition is shifted to much higher temperatures. A
combined analysis of thermal expansion and susceptibility gives evidence that
the spin-state transition has to be attributed to a population of an
intermediate-spin state with orbital order for and without orbital
order for larger . In contrast to the spin-state transition, the
metal-insulator transition is shifted only moderately to higher temperatures
with increasing Eu content, showing that the metal-insulator transition occurs
independently from the spin-state distribution of the Co ions. Around
the metal-insulator transition the magnetic susceptibility shows a similar
increase for all and approaches a doping-independent value around 1000 K
indicating that well above the metal-insulator transition the same spin state
is approached for all .Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Magnetoresistance, specific heat and magnetocaloric effect of equiatomic rare-earth transition-metal magnesium compounds
We present a study of the magnetoresistance, the specific heat and the
magnetocaloric effect of equiatomic Mg intermetallics with , Eu, Gd, Yb and , Au and of GdAuIn. Depending on the
composition these compounds are paramagnetic (, Yb) or they
order either ferro- or antiferromagnetically with transition temperatures
ranging from about 13 to 81 K. All of them are metallic, but the resistivity
varies over 3 orders of magnitude. The magnetic order causes a strong decrease
of the resistivity and around the ordering temperature we find pronounced
magnetoresistance effects. The magnetic ordering also leads to well-defined
anomalies in the specific heat. An analysis of the entropy change leads to the
conclusions that generally the magnetic transition can be described by an
ordering of localized moments arising from the half-filled
shells of Eu or Gd. However, for GdAgMg we find clear evidence
for two phase transitions indicating that the magnetic ordering sets in
partially below about 125 K and is completed via an almost first-order
transition at 39 K. The magnetocaloric effect is weak for the antiferromagnets
and rather pronounced for the ferromagnets for low magnetic fields around the
zero-field Curie temperature.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures include
Magnetic excitations in two-leg spin 1/2 ladders: experiment and theory
Magnetic excitations in two-leg S=1/2 ladders are studied both experimentally
and theoretically. Experimentally, we report on the reflectivity, the
transmission and the optical conductivity sigma(omega) of undoped La_x Ca_14-x
Cu_24 O_41 for x=4, 5, and 5.2. Using two different theoretical approaches
(Jordan-Wigner fermions and perturbation theory), we calculate the dispersion
of the elementary triplets, the optical conductivity and the momentum-resolved
spectral density of two-triplet excitations for 0.2 <=
J_parallel/J_perpendicular <= 1.2. We discuss phonon-assisted two-triplet
absorption, the existence of two-triplet bound states, the two-triplet
continuum, and the size of the exchange parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 7 eps figures, submitted to SNS 200
Optical spectroscopy of (La,Ca)14Cu24O41 spin ladders: comparison of experiment and theory
Transmission and reflectivity of La_x Ca_14-x Cu_24 O_41 two-leg spin-1/2
ladders were measured in the mid-infrared regime between 500 and 12000 1/cm.
This allows us to determine the optical conductivity sigma_1 directly and with
high sensitivity. Here we show data for x=4 and 5 with the electrical field
polarized parallel to the rungs (E||a) and to the legs (E||c). Three
characteristic peaks are identified as magnetic excitations by comparison with
two different theoretical calculations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to SCES 200
Heat transport in SrCu_2(BO_3)_2 and CuGeO_3
In the low dimensional spin systems and the
thermal conductivities along different crystal directions show pronounced
double-peak structures and strongly depend on magnetic fields. For
the experimental data can be described by a purely phononic
heat current and resonant scattering of phonons by magnetic excitations. A
similar effect seems to be important in , too but, in addition, a
magnetic contribution to the heat transport may be present.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; appears in the proceedings of the SCES2001
(Physica B
Helical magnetic structure and the anomalous and topological Hall effects in epitaxial B20 FeCoGe films
Epitaxial films of the B20-structure alloy FeCoGe were grown by
molecular beam epitaxy on Si (111) substrates. The magnetization varied
smoothly from the bulk-like values of one Bohr magneton per Fe atom for FeGe to
zero for non-magnetic CoGe. The chiral lattice structure leads to a
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI), and the films' helical magnetic ground
state was confirmed using polarized neutron reflectometry measurements. The
pitch of the spin helix, measured by this method, varies with Co content
and diverges at . This indicates a zero-crossing of the DMI, which
we reproduced in calculations using first principle methods. We also measured
the longitudinal and Hall resistivity of our films as a function of magnetic
field, temperature, and Co content . The Hall resistivity is expected to
contain contributions from the ordinary, anomalous, and topological Hall
effects. Both the anomalous and topological Hall resistivities show peaks
around . Our first principles calculations show a peak in the
topological Hall constant at this value of , related to the strong
spin-polarisation predicted for intermediate values of . Half-metallicity is
predicted for , consistent with the experimentally observed linear
magnetoresistance at this composition. Whilst it is possible to reconcile
theory with experiment for the various Hall effects for FeGe, the large
topological Hall resistivities for are much larger then expected
when the very small emergent fields associated with the divergence in the DMI
are taken into account
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