The first direct observation of charge order of Ni(3+delta(')) and Ni(3-delta) by resonant x-ray scattering experiments in an epitaxial film of NdNiO3 is reported. A quantitative value of delta+delta(') = (0.45 +/- 0.04)e was obtained. The temperature dependence of the charge order deviates significantly from those of the magnetic moment and crystallographic structure. This might be an indication of a difference in their fluctuation time scales. These observations are discussed in terms of the temperature-driven metal-insulator transition in the RNiO3 family.
Resonant x-ray scattering experiments at the vanadium K edge demonstrate the existence of orbital ordering in V 2 O 3 . Bragg peaks due to the long-range order of 3d orbitals occupancy are observed when the photon energy is tuned to the threshold of the vanadium 3d bands. The azimuthal dependence of the resonant intensities confirms that the resonance arises from the ordering of the vanadium orbital occupancy. The observed orbital structure accounts for the complex magnetic structure of V 2 O 3 . The measured magnetic and orbital responses have the same critical temperature T N .[S0031-9007 (99)09287-X] PACS numbers: 78.70.Ck, 71.30. + h, 75.50.EeTwenty years ago, Castellani et al. [1] proposed that long-range order in the occupancy of the vanadium 3d orbitals was responsible for the complex magnetic properties of V 2 O 3 . Upon doping with Cr and/or under the application of hydrostatic pressure [2,3] V 2 O 3 exhibits both insulating and metallic phases with peculiar magnetic correlations [4][5][6]. It was suggested [1] that the spatial ordering of the occupancy of degenerate electronic orbitals accounts for the anisotropic exchange integrals found in the antiferromagnetic insulator phase (AFI) [5]. Furthermore, fluctuations in the orbital occupancy have been invoked to explain the evolution of the magnetic correlations in various phases of the V 2 O 3 system [6]. It appears that orbital occupancy plays a central role in the physics of V 2 O 3 , but no direct proof for orbital order could be produced experimentally since the original proposal in the late 1970s.In this Letter we present resonant x-ray scattering (RXS) experiments at the K edge of vanadium that demonstrate unambiguously the existence of orbital order in V 2 O 3 and provide information on the type of ordering. RXS is sensitive to the occupancy of electronic orbitals because it probes the symmetry of vacant electronic states through resonant multipole electric transitions; the variation of the orbital resonant scattering cross section with the direction of the incident polarization (azimuthal angle F) reflects the spatial symmetry of ordered orbitals. Furthermore, RXS may be tuned to probe selectively the electronic shells where orbital order takes place. In the case of V 2 O 3 , theoretical calculations [7] have shown that the resonance at the vanadium K edge provides observable cross sections arising from the order of the 3d vanadium states.RXS experiments were performed at the ID20 magnetic scattering undulator beam line at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility [8]. A double crystal, Si(111), monochromator located between two focusing mirrors defined a narrow energy band around the vanadium K edge (FHWM 0.8 eV) with a high degree of linear s polarization. The x-ray beam was diffracted by the sample onto a pyrolitic graphite crystal analyzer [(004) reflection] to separate the s and p components of the scattered radiation. The sample was mounted with beeswax in a closed cycle refrigerator which could be rotated about the scattering vector to p...
We report the first observation of a nonreciprocal x-ray linear dichroism caused by the time-reversal odd, real part zeta of the complex gyrotropy tensor zeta(*) which is dominated by electric dipole-electric quadrupole E1E2 interference terms. A nonreciprocal transverse anisotropy was observed in the low temperature insulating phase of a Cr doped V2O3 Mott crystal when a single antiferromagnetic domain was grown by magnetoelectric annealing along the hexagonal c axis. This new element (edge) specific spectroscopy could nicely complement x-ray magnetic circular dichroism which is silent for antiferromagnetic materials.
We present the results of resonant x-ray scattering experiments on KCuF3. Structurally forbidden reflections, corresponding to magnetic and 3d-orbital long-range order, have been observed. Integrated intensities have been measured as a function of incident energy, polarization, azimuthal angle, and temperature. The results give evidence for a strong coupling between orbital and spin degrees of freedom. The interplay between magnetic and orbital order parameters is revealed by the temperature dependence of the intensity of orbital Bragg peaks.
No abstract
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.