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Spin Dynamics and Magnetic MultilayersSkubic, Björn January 2007 (has links)
<p>Theoretical studies based on first-principles theory are presented for a number of different magnetic systems. The first part of the thesis concerns spin dynamics and the second part concerns properties of magnetic multilayers. The theoretical treatment is based on electronic structure calculations performed by means of density functional theory.</p><p>A method is developed for simulating atomistic spin dynamics at finite temperatures, which is based on solving the equations of motion for the atomic spins by means of Langevin dynamics. The method relies on a mapping of the interatomic exchange interactions from density functional theory to a Heisenberg Hamiltonian. Simulations are performed for various magnetic systems and processes beyond the reach of conventional micromagnetism. As an example, magnetization dynamics in the limit of large magnetic and anisotropy fields is explored. Moreover, the method is applied to studying the dynamics of systems with complex atomic order such as the diluted magnetic semiconductor MnGaAs and the spin glass alloy CuMn. The method is also applied to a Fe thin film and a Fe/Cr/Fe trilayer system, where the limits of ultrafast switching are explored. Current induced magnetization dynamics is investigated by calculating the current induced spin-transfer torque by means of density functional theory combined with the relaxation time approximation and semi-classical Boltzmann theory. The current induced torque is calculated for the helical spin-density waves in Er and fcc Fe, where the current is found to promote a rigid rotation of the magnetic order.</p><p>Properties of magnetic multilayers composed of magnetic and nonmagnetic layers are investigated by means of the Korringa-Kohn-Rostocker interface Green's function method. Multilayer properties such as magnetic moments, interlayer exchange coupling and ordering temperatures are calculated and compared with experiments, with focus on understanding the influence of interface quality. Moreover, the influence on the interlayer exchange coupling of alloying the nonmagnetic spacer layers with small amounts of a magnetic impurity is investigated.</p>
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Spin Dynamics and Magnetic MultilayersSkubic, Björn January 2007 (has links)
Theoretical studies based on first-principles theory are presented for a number of different magnetic systems. The first part of the thesis concerns spin dynamics and the second part concerns properties of magnetic multilayers. The theoretical treatment is based on electronic structure calculations performed by means of density functional theory. A method is developed for simulating atomistic spin dynamics at finite temperatures, which is based on solving the equations of motion for the atomic spins by means of Langevin dynamics. The method relies on a mapping of the interatomic exchange interactions from density functional theory to a Heisenberg Hamiltonian. Simulations are performed for various magnetic systems and processes beyond the reach of conventional micromagnetism. As an example, magnetization dynamics in the limit of large magnetic and anisotropy fields is explored. Moreover, the method is applied to studying the dynamics of systems with complex atomic order such as the diluted magnetic semiconductor MnGaAs and the spin glass alloy CuMn. The method is also applied to a Fe thin film and a Fe/Cr/Fe trilayer system, where the limits of ultrafast switching are explored. Current induced magnetization dynamics is investigated by calculating the current induced spin-transfer torque by means of density functional theory combined with the relaxation time approximation and semi-classical Boltzmann theory. The current induced torque is calculated for the helical spin-density waves in Er and fcc Fe, where the current is found to promote a rigid rotation of the magnetic order. Properties of magnetic multilayers composed of magnetic and nonmagnetic layers are investigated by means of the Korringa-Kohn-Rostocker interface Green's function method. Multilayer properties such as magnetic moments, interlayer exchange coupling and ordering temperatures are calculated and compared with experiments, with focus on understanding the influence of interface quality. Moreover, the influence on the interlayer exchange coupling of alloying the nonmagnetic spacer layers with small amounts of a magnetic impurity is investigated.
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Interplay of magnetic, orthorhombic, and superconducting phase transitions in iron-based superconductorsSchmiedt, Jacob 29 October 2014 (has links) (PDF)
The physics of iron pnictides has been the subject of intense research for half a decade since the discovery of superconductivity in doped LaFeAsO in 2008. By now there exists a large number of different materials that are summarized under the term "pnictides'' with significant differences in their crystal structure, electronic properties, and their phase diagrams. This thesis is concerned with the investigation of the various phase transitions that are observed in the underdoped compounds of the pnictide subgroups RFeAsO, where R is a rare-earth element, and AFe_2As_2, where A is an alkaline-earth element. These compounds display two closely bound transitions from a tetragonal to an orthorhombic phase and from a paramagnetic to an antiferromagnetic metal. Both symmetry-broken phases are suppressed by doping or pressure and close to their disappearance superconductivity sets in. The superconducting state is stabilized until some optimal doping or pressure is reached and gets suppressed thereafter. The central goal of this thesis is to improve our understanding of the interplay between these three phases and to describe the various phase transitions. We start from an itinerant picture that explains the magnetism as a result of an excitonic instability and show how the other phases can be included into this picture. This approach is based on the the observation that the compounds we are interested in have a Fermi surface with multiple nested electron and hole pockets and that they have small to intermediate interaction strengths.
The thesis starts with a study of the doping dependence of the antiferromagnetic phase transition in four different five-orbital models. We use the random-phase approximation to determine the transition temperature, the dominant ordering vector, and the contribution of the different orbitals to the ordering. This allows us to identify the more realistic models, which give results that are in good agreement with experimental observations. In addition to the frequently made assumption of orbital-independent interaction potentials we study the effect of a reduction of the interaction strengths that involve the d_{xy} orbital. We find that this tunes the system between two different nesting instabilities. A reduction of the interactions that involve the d_{xy} orbital also enhances the tendency towards incommensurate (IC) order. For a weak reduction this tendency is compensated by the presence of the orthorhombic phase. However, for a reduction of 30%, as it is suggested by constrained random-phase-approximation calculations, we always find large doping ranges, where a state with IC order has the highest transition temperature.
We continue the investigation of the magnetic phase transition by studying the competition of different possible types of antiferromagnetic order that arises from the presence of two degenerate nesting instabilities with the ordering vectors (pi,0) and (0,pi). We derive a Ginzburg-Landau free energy from a microscopic two-band model and find that the presence of the experimentally observed stripe phase strongly depends on the number and size of the hole pockets in the system and on the doping. We show that within the picture of a purely magnetically driven nematic phase transition, which breaks the C_4 symmetry and induces the orthorhombic distortion, the nematic phase displays exactly the same dependence on the model parameters as the magnetic stripe phase. We propose that in addition to the purely magnetically driven nematic instability there is a ferro-orbital instability in the system that stabilizes the nematic transition and, thus, explains the experimentally observed robustness of the orthorhombic transition. We argue that including a ferro-orbital instability into the picture may also be necessary to reproduce the transition from simultaneous first-order transitions into an orthorhombic antiferromagnetic state to two separate second-order transitions, which is observed as a function of doping.
Finally, a study of the superconducting phase transition inside the antiferromagnetic phase that is observed in some pnictide compounds is presented. We present an approach to calculate the fluctuation-mediated pairing interaction in the spin-density-wave phase of a multiband system, which is based on the random-phase approximation. This approach is applied to a minimal two-band model for the pnictides to study the effect of the various symmetry-allowed bare on-site interactions on the gap symmetry and structure. We find a competition between various even- and odd-parity states and over a limited parameter range a p_x-wave state is the dominant instability. The largest part of the parameter space is dominated by even parity states but the gap structure sensitively depends on the bare interactions. We propose that the experimentally observed transition from a nodeless to a nodal gap can be due to changes in the on-site interaction potentials.
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Études calorimétriques des comportements multicritiques des phases ondes de densité de spin dans un composé moléculairePESTY, François 14 June 1993 (has links) (PDF)
Mes travaux ont été consacrés à l'étude expérimentale d'un composé moléculaire de basse dimensionnalité, le (TMTSF)2ClO4. C'est un supraconducteur aux températures inférieures à 1,2 K, mais un champ magnétique induit à basse température une cascade de phases Ondes de Densité de Spin (ODSIC) quantifiées, au-dessus d'environ 3 teslas. J'ai développé plusieurs appareillages et techniques expérimentales, notamment la mesure simultanée de la chaleur spécifique et de la conductibilité thermique (en champ magnétique fixe), ou de l'effet magnétocalorique (en champ magnétique variable). Mes investigations calorimétriques ont débouché sur toute une série de découvertes surprenantes qui ont suscité nombre de travaux théoriques. -1- Dans l'état supraconducteur, à champ nul, un dépairage est induit par le désordre d'anion, très similaire à l'effet analogue induit par les impuretés magnétiques dans un supraconducteur conventionnel. -2- A bas champ (B<8T), la transition métal-ODSIC présente un caractère couplage faible. -3- Certaines transitions sont partiellement réentrantes. -4- Le saut de la chaleur spécifique à la transition ?c?est-à-dire la force du couplage !-? oscille en fonction du champ magnétique, et sa valeur présente des discontinuités aux limites entre phases ODS quantifiées. -5- A fort champ, le système entre dans un régime de couplage fort (voire très fort). -6- Le comportement semble évoluer de 3D vers 2D à la traversée de la frontière. -7- La conductivité thermique semble dominée par les vibrations de réseau, mais le comportement critique est associé à la transition électronique. -8- Près de la fin de la cascade de transitions, celles-ci deviennent exothermiques quel que soit le sens de traversée de la dernière ligne de transition, le signe d?un comportement hautement irréversible. -9- Pour un échantillon refroidi assez lentement à travers la transition de mise en ordre des anions, ces lignes de transition se séparent au cours d'un processus itératif, conduisant à l'observation d'un diagramme de phases arborescent. -10- Nous avons révélé l?existence d?un point tétracritique, qui correspond à la rencontre de quatre lignes de transition en un seul point. -11- Lorsque le désordre d'anions augmente, le comportement tétracritique évolue vers un comportement bicritique, l'arborescence des lignes de transition disparaît, et nous observons un effet de dépairage similaire à celui présenté par la phase supraconductrice du même composé, mais d'amplitude beaucoup plus forte.
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Étude des phases onde de densité de spin induites par le champ magnétique dans les conducteurs organiques quasi-unidimensionnels : rôle du désordreTSOBNANG, François 13 December 1991 (has links) (PDF)
Le rôle du désordre sur les phases onde de densité de spin induites par le champ magnétique (ODSIC) a été étudié sur un monocristal de (TMTSF)2ClO4. Les propriétés à basse température de ce conducteur organique quasi-unidimensionnel dépendent de la vitesse de refroidissement au passage de la transition de mise en ordre des anions qu'il subit à 24 kelvins. Nous avons utilisé cet effet de cinétique pour contrôler le taux de désordre dans l'échantillon. Nos investigations ont été effectuées à l'aide de mesures calorimétriques: d'une part, des mesures simultanées de la chaleur spécifique et de l'effet magnétocalorique en champ variable, et d'autre part, des mesures de la chaleur spécifique en champ fixe. Nous avons mis en évidence un nouveau comportement multicritique en un point de la ligne de transition du second ordre, qui sépare la phase métallique et les sous-phases ODSIC. La criticité de ce point passe de "tétracritique" à bicritique lorsque le désordre augmente. Le point "tétracritique" peut être interprété comme le résultat de la superposition de deux sous phases-ODSIC adjacentes. Nous rapportons aussi un effet de dépairage de paires électron-trou induit par le désordre non magnétique Ce dépairage diffère du comportement universel. De plus l'écart par rapport à ce dernier dépend du champ magnétique. Enfin il n'est pas monotone en fonction du champ. Par ailleurs, les mesures que nous avons effectuées montrent que la mise en ordre des anions n'influence pas directement les réentrances partielles de l'état métallique dans les sous-phases ODSIC entre 3 et 7 teslas. Ceci permet de penser que, dans ce domaine de champs magnétiques, la bande interdite ouverte dans le spectre d'énergie du fait de la mise en ordre des anions ne serait pas directement responsable des réentrances.
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Interplay of magnetic, orthorhombic, and superconducting phase transitions in iron-based superconductorsSchmiedt, Jacob 07 October 2014 (has links)
The physics of iron pnictides has been the subject of intense research for half a decade since the discovery of superconductivity in doped LaFeAsO in 2008. By now there exists a large number of different materials that are summarized under the term "pnictides'' with significant differences in their crystal structure, electronic properties, and their phase diagrams. This thesis is concerned with the investigation of the various phase transitions that are observed in the underdoped compounds of the pnictide subgroups RFeAsO, where R is a rare-earth element, and AFe_2As_2, where A is an alkaline-earth element. These compounds display two closely bound transitions from a tetragonal to an orthorhombic phase and from a paramagnetic to an antiferromagnetic metal. Both symmetry-broken phases are suppressed by doping or pressure and close to their disappearance superconductivity sets in. The superconducting state is stabilized until some optimal doping or pressure is reached and gets suppressed thereafter. The central goal of this thesis is to improve our understanding of the interplay between these three phases and to describe the various phase transitions. We start from an itinerant picture that explains the magnetism as a result of an excitonic instability and show how the other phases can be included into this picture. This approach is based on the the observation that the compounds we are interested in have a Fermi surface with multiple nested electron and hole pockets and that they have small to intermediate interaction strengths.
The thesis starts with a study of the doping dependence of the antiferromagnetic phase transition in four different five-orbital models. We use the random-phase approximation to determine the transition temperature, the dominant ordering vector, and the contribution of the different orbitals to the ordering. This allows us to identify the more realistic models, which give results that are in good agreement with experimental observations. In addition to the frequently made assumption of orbital-independent interaction potentials we study the effect of a reduction of the interaction strengths that involve the d_{xy} orbital. We find that this tunes the system between two different nesting instabilities. A reduction of the interactions that involve the d_{xy} orbital also enhances the tendency towards incommensurate (IC) order. For a weak reduction this tendency is compensated by the presence of the orthorhombic phase. However, for a reduction of 30%, as it is suggested by constrained random-phase-approximation calculations, we always find large doping ranges, where a state with IC order has the highest transition temperature.
We continue the investigation of the magnetic phase transition by studying the competition of different possible types of antiferromagnetic order that arises from the presence of two degenerate nesting instabilities with the ordering vectors (pi,0) and (0,pi). We derive a Ginzburg-Landau free energy from a microscopic two-band model and find that the presence of the experimentally observed stripe phase strongly depends on the number and size of the hole pockets in the system and on the doping. We show that within the picture of a purely magnetically driven nematic phase transition, which breaks the C_4 symmetry and induces the orthorhombic distortion, the nematic phase displays exactly the same dependence on the model parameters as the magnetic stripe phase. We propose that in addition to the purely magnetically driven nematic instability there is a ferro-orbital instability in the system that stabilizes the nematic transition and, thus, explains the experimentally observed robustness of the orthorhombic transition. We argue that including a ferro-orbital instability into the picture may also be necessary to reproduce the transition from simultaneous first-order transitions into an orthorhombic antiferromagnetic state to two separate second-order transitions, which is observed as a function of doping.
Finally, a study of the superconducting phase transition inside the antiferromagnetic phase that is observed in some pnictide compounds is presented. We present an approach to calculate the fluctuation-mediated pairing interaction in the spin-density-wave phase of a multiband system, which is based on the random-phase approximation. This approach is applied to a minimal two-band model for the pnictides to study the effect of the various symmetry-allowed bare on-site interactions on the gap symmetry and structure. We find a competition between various even- and odd-parity states and over a limited parameter range a p_x-wave state is the dominant instability. The largest part of the parameter space is dominated by even parity states but the gap structure sensitively depends on the bare interactions. We propose that the experimentally observed transition from a nodeless to a nodal gap can be due to changes in the on-site interaction potentials.
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