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Magnetische und elektronische Eigenschaften von Übergangsmetalloxid-NanostrukturenHellmann, Ingo 29 September 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Die eingereichte Dissertation befasst sich mit Übergangsmetalloxid-Nanostrukturen, wobei quasi-eindimensionale Materialien im Mittelpunkt stehen, z.B. Nanoröhren und Nanostäbe. Mittels Suszeptibilitäts- bzw. EELS-Messungen wurden magnetische und elektronische Eigenschaften verschiedener Nanoverbindungen untersucht. Zur weiteren Charakterisierung der Proben wurden außerdem Magnetisierungsmessungen (VSM, Pulsfeld), optische Spektroskopie, AC-Suszeptibilitätsmessungen, Messungen der spezifischen Wärme sowie NMR- und ESR-Experimente durchgeführt. Ein Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit sind Vanadiumoxid-Verbindungen, wobei Vanadiumoxid-Nanoröhren (VOxNT) aufgrund ihrer besonderen Morphologie eine Sonderstellung unter den vorgestellten Materialien
besitzen. Suszeptibilitätsmessungen an den VOxNT offenbaren aktiviertes Verhalten bei Temperaturen T > 100 K, was auf V4+-Spindimere zurückgeführt werden kann. Zudem existieren quasi-freie V4+-Momente sowie längere Spinkettenfragmente, z.B. Trimere. Elektronische Anregungen im Valenzband können wahrscheinlich dem Platzwechsel von 3d-Elektronen zwischen V4+- und V5+-Plätzen innerhalb der gemischtvalenten V-O-Ebenen zugeschrieben werden. Durch Dotierung mit Alkalimetallen ist es möglich, die V 3d-Niveaus mit zusätzlichen Elektronen zu besetzen und dadurch die Vanadiumvalenz zu beeinflussen (V5+ -> V4+ -> V3+). Die dabei auftretenden stärkeren Coulombabstoßungen zwischen den V 3d-Elektronen beeinträchtigen die Mobilität der Ladungsträger. Ebenso wurde gezeigt, dass sich durch die Dotierung mit Ammoniak und
anderen Übergangsmetallionen die Vanadiumvalenz sowie der Magnetismus der VOxNT beeinflussen lassen. Die Ergebnisse von weiteren Vanadiumoxid-Nanostrukturen - Co0.33V2O5,
alpha-NaV2O5, VO2(B) sowie V3O7·H2O-Nanokristallen - zeigen, dass sehr unterschiedliches magnetisches Verhalten wie Paarbildung zwischen V4+-Spins, antiferromagnetisch gekoppelte Spinketten oder ein Phasenübergang zwischen zwei paramagnetischen Temperaturbereichen auf Nanoebene realisiert werden kann. Die
magnetischen Eigenschaften von MnO2-Nanostäben sind durch starke Kopplungen und Frustration zwischen den Mn-Spins gekennzeichnet. Außerdem zeigt die Verbindung Merkmale eines Spinglases. Durch Dotierung mit Elektronen lässt sich bei diesem Material die Mn-Valenz verändern. Schließlich zeigen erste Charakterisierungsmessungen
an übergangsmetalldotierten MoO3-Nanobändern paramagnetisches Verhalten dieser Systeme.
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ESR and Magnetization Studies of Transition Metal Molecular CompoundsAliabadi, Azar 26 January 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Molecule-based magnets (molecular magnets) have attracted much interest in recent decades both from an experimental and from a theoretical point of view, not only because of their interesting physical effects, but also because of their potential applications: e.g., molecular spintronics, quantum computing, high density information storage, and nanomedicine. Molecular magnets are at the very bottom of the possible size of nanomagnets. On reducing the size of objects down to the nanoscale, the coexistence of classical properties and quantum properties in these systems may be observed. In additional, molecular magnets exist with structural variability and permit selective substitution of the ligands in order to alter their magnetic properties. Therefore, these characteristics make such molecules suitable candidates for studying molecular magnetism. They can be used as model systems for a detailed understanding of interplay between structural and magnetic properties of them in order to optimize desired magnetic properties.
This thesis considers the investigation of magnetic properties of several new transition metal molecular compounds via different experimental techniques (continuous wave electron spin resonance (CW ESR), pulse ESR, high-field/high-frequency ESR (HF-ESR) and static magnetization techniques).
The first studied compounds were mono- and trinuclear Cu(II)-(oxamato, oxamidato)/bis(oxamidato) type compounds. First, all components of the g-tensor and the tensors of onsite ACu and transferred AN HF interactions of mononuclear Cu(II)- bis(oxamidato) compounds have been determined from CW ESR measurements at 10 GHz and at room temperature and pulse ELDOR detected NMR measurements at 35 GHz and at 20 K. The spin density distributions of the mononuclear compounds have been calculated from the experimentally obtained HF tensors. The magnetic exchange constants J of their corresponding trinuclear compounds were determined from susceptibility measurements versus temperature. Our discussion of the spin density distribution of the mononuclear compounds together with the results of the magnetic characterization of their corresponding trinuclear compounds show that the spin population of the mononuclear compounds is in interplay with the J values of their corresponding trinuclear compounds.
The second studied compounds were polynuclear Cu(II)-(bis)oxamato compounds with ferrocene and ferrocenium ligands. The magnetic properties of these compounds were studied by susceptibility measurements versus temperature to determine J values. In addition, the ESR technique is used to investigate the magnetic properties of the studied compounds because they contain two different magnetic ions and because only the ESR technique can selectively excite different electron spin species. These studies together with geometries of the ferrocenium ligands determined by crystallographic studies indicate that the magnetic interaction between a central Cu(II) and a Fe(III) ions changed from the antiferromagnetic coupling to the ferromagnetic coupling when a stronger distortion of the axial symmetry in the feroccenium cation exists. Therefore, the degree of the distortion of the feroccenium cation is a control parameter for the sign of the interaction between the central Cu(II) ion and the Fe(III) spins of the studied compounds.
The last two studied molecular magnets were a binuclear Ni(II) compound (Ni(II)-dimer) and a cube-like tetranuclear compound with a [Fe4O4]-cube core (Fe4-cube). HF-ESR measurements enabled us to determine the g-factor, the sign, and the absolute value of the magnetic anisotropy parameters. Using this information together with static magnetization measurements, the J value and the magnetic ground state of the studied compounds have been determined. In Ni(II)-dimer, two Ni(II) ions, each having a spin S = 1, are coupled antiferromagnetically that leads to a ground state with total spin Stot = 0. An easy plane magnetic anisotropy with a preferable direction for each Ni(II) ion is found. For Fe4-cube, a ground state with total spin Stot = 8 has been determined. The analysis of the frequency dependence and temperature dependence of HF-ESR lines reveals an easy axis magnetic anisotropy (Dcube = -22 GHz (-1 K)) corresponding to an energy barrier of U = 64 K for the thermal relaxation of the magnetization. These results indicate that Fe4-cube is favorable to show single molecular magnet (SMM) behavior.
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Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy of low-dimensional spin systemsArango, Yulieth Cristina 14 June 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The research in low-dimensional (low-D) quantum spin systems has become an arduous challenge for the condensed matter physics community during the last years. In systems with low dimensional magnetic interactions the exchange coupling is restricted to dimensions lower than the full three-D exhibited by the bulk real material. The remarkable interest in this field is fueled by a continuous stream of striking discoveries like superconductivity, quantum liquid and spin gap states, chiral phases, etc, derived from the strong effect of quantum fluctuations on the macroscopic properties of the system and the competition between electronic and magnetic degrees of freedom. The main goal of the current studies is to reach a broad understanding of the mechanisms that participate in the formation of those novel ground states as well as the characteristic dependence with respect to relevant physical parameters. In this thesis we present the results of an Electron Spin Resonance (ESR)-based study on different quasi-1D spin systems, exemplifying the realization of 1D-magnetic spin-chains typically containing transition metal oxides such as Cu2+ or V4+.
The local sensitivity of the ESR technique has been considered useful in exploring magnetic excitation energies, dominant mechanisms of exchange interactions, spin fluctuations and the dimensionality of the electron spin system, among others. Aside from ESR other experimental results, e.g., magnetization and nuclear magnetic resonance besides some theoretical approaches were especially helpful in achieving a proper understanding and modeling of those low-D spin systems.
This thesis is organized into two parts: The first three chapters are devoted to the basic knowledge of the subject. The first chapter is about magnetic exchange interactions between spin moments and the effect of the crystal field potential and the external magnetic field. The second chapter is a short introduction on exchange interactions in a 1D-spin chain, and the third chapter is devoted to ESR basics and the elucidation of dynamic magnetic properties from the absorption spectrum parameters.
The second part deals with the experimental results. In the fourth chapter we start with the magnetization results from the zero-dimensional endohedral fullerene Dy3N@C80. This system is seemingly ESR “silent” at the frequency of X-band experiments. The fifth chapter shows an unexpected temperature dependence of the anisotropy in the homometallic ferrimagnet Na2Cu5Si4O14 containing alternating dimer-trimer units in the zig-zag Cu-O chains. In the sixth chapter different magnetic species in the layer structure of vanadium oxide nanotubes (VOx-NT) have been identified, confirming earlier magnetization measurements. Moreover the superparamagnetic-like nature of the Li-doped VOx-NT samples was found to justify its ferromagnetic character at particular Li concentration on the room temperature scale. In the seventh chapter the Li2ZrCuO4 system is presented as a unique model to study the influence of additional interactions on frustrated magnetism. The eighth chapter highlights the magnetic properties of the pyrocompound Cu2As2O7. The results suggest significant spin fluctuations below TN.
The thesis closes with the summary and the list of references.
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High-field electron spin resonance in low-dimensional spin systemsOzerov, Mykhaylo 14 June 2011 (has links) (PDF)
Due to recent progress in theory and the growing number of physical realizations, low-dimensional quantum magnets continue to receive a considerable amount of attention. They serve as model systems for investigating numerous physical phenomena in spin systems with cooperative ground states, including the field-induced evolution of the ground-state properties and the corresponding rearrangement of their low-energy excitation spectra. This work is devoted to systematic studies of recently synthesized low-dimensional quantum spin systems by means of multi-frequency high-field electron spin resonance (ESR) investigations. In the spin- 1/2 chain compound (C6H9N2)CuCl3 [known as (6MAP)CuCl3] the striking incompatibility with a simple uniform S = 1/2 Heisenberg chain model employed previously is revealed. The observed ESR mode is explained in terms of a recently developed theory, revealing the important role of the alternation and next-nearest-neighbor interactions in this compound. The excitations spectrum in copper pyrimidine dinitrate [PM·Cu(NO3)2(H2O)2]n, an S = 1/2 antiferromagnetic chain material with alternating g-tensor and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, is probed in magnetic fields up to 63 T. To study the high field behavior of the field-induced energy gap in this material, a multi-frequency pulsed-field ESR spectrometer is built. Pronounced changes in the frequency-field dependence of the magnetic excitations are observed in the vicinity of the saturation field, B ∼ Bs = 48.5 T. ESR results clearly indicate a transition from the soliton-breather to a spin-polarized state with magnons as elementary excitations. Experimental data are compared with results of density matrix renormalization group calculations; excellent agreement is found. ESR studies of the spin-ladder material (C5H12N)2CuBr4 (known as BPCB) completes the determination of the full spin Hamiltonian of this compound. ESR results provide a direct evidence for a pronounced anisotropy in this compound, that is in contrast to fully isotropic spin-ladder model employed previously for BPCB. Our observations can be of particular importance for describing the rich temperature-field phase diagram of this material. The frequency-field diagram of magnetic excitations in the quasi-two dimensional S = 1/2 compound [Cu(C4H4N2)2(HF2)]PF6 in the AFM-ordered state is studied. The AFM gap is observed directly. Using high-field magnetization and ESR results, parameters of the effective spin-Hamiltonian (exchange interaction, anisotropy and g-factor) are obtained and compared with those estimated from thermodynamic properties of this compound.
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