Magnetism In Iron Based Compound

FRAWLEY, THOMAS WILLIAM (2015) Magnetism In Iron Based Compound. Doctoral thesis, Durham University.
Copy

This thesis describes the investigation of a range of iron-based compounds which ex- hibit a variety of different electronic phases, from magnetoresistance to ferroelectricity. X-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction, and muon spectroscopy techniques were used to probe the magnetism to provide an explanation of the microscopic mechanism for the bulk electronic properties. X-ray diffraction is a set of techniques that probe electronic ordering in a periodic crystalline system. If the x-ray energy is tuned to an absorption edge of a magnetically active ion in the compound sensitivity to the magnetic order can be gained. These x-ray techniques were used to study magnetoresistance in SrFeO3−δ, revealing an interplay between the structural, charge and magnetic order as the origin. Neutron diffraction is an established set of techniques that can directly probe the magnetic order of a crystalline compound. Neutron diffraction was used in conjunction with x-rays to study the ferroelectric and Ising-like phases in the triangular lattice antiferromagnet CuFeO2, revealing strong spin-lattice coupling, the coexistence of antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic phases and the splitting of the magnetic order in the ferroelectric phase into two inequivalent orbits with a phase separation between them. Diffraction techniques re- quire long-range order of the magnetic ground state to be of utility. Muon spectroscopy is a local probe that can study magnetism in systems where the magnetic order remains short-ranged. Muon spectroscopy was used to study the spin-freezing phenomena in Fe- CrAs, and revealed a two stage transition and interaction energies associated with them. Polarisation analysis was used together with resonant x-ray scattering to obtain quanti- tative information on the structure of the magnetic helical structure of FeAs, quantifying the degree of ellipticity to the magnetic helix, and revealing an out-of-plane oscillating canted structure to the spin helix.


picture_as_pdf
ThomasFrawleyThesis.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication 1.0 (CC0)

View Download

EndNote Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core Data Cite XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span ASCII Citation HTML Citation MODS MPEG-21 DIDL METS OpenURL ContextObject
Export