Physical Society Colloquium
Powder diffraction in high magnetic fields: from a new
tool to novel physics
Iowa State University
Temperature and/or pressure induced polymorphism is common compared
to structural rearrangements triggered by a magnetic field. While the
former is routinely probed in-situ, especially by temperature dependent
powder diffraction, the most common tools employed in detecting magnetic
field induced polymorphic transformations are bulk field-dependent
measurements of the physical properties, such as the electrical resistance,
magnetization and strain. On one hand, discontinuities in the behavior of
these macroscopic properties serve as suitable evidence of a structural
phase transition, but on the other hand, they provide no clues about the
atomic-scale mechanism. Furthermore, there are cases when temperature
alone cannot trigger a transformation. By successfully coupling a
rotating anode powder diffractometer with a continuous-flow cryostat
and a split-coil superconducting magnet we are now capable of obtaining
excellent Rietveld-quality powder diffraction data between 2.5 and 315 K
in 0 to 4 T magnetic fields. A typical experiment can be carried out in
~10 minutes (usually sufficient to quantify phase content and determine
changes in unit cell parameters) or in a few hours (if detailed information
about individual atomic parameters is required). Both subtle and massive
magnetic field-induced structural changes can be detected, providing
much needed structural data in order to develop a better understanding of
structure-property relationships of solids.
This research was supported by the Division of Materials Science
of the Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the US DOE under contract
No. W-7405-ENG-82.
Friday, November 10th 2006, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Key Auditorium (room 112)
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