2006
DOI: 10.1590/s1516-14392006000100021
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Structural and magnetic study of the MnAs magnetocaloric compound

Abstract: The temperature induced phase transition in MnAs is analyzed in this work using X ray Rietveld refinement. The results show the presence of the hexagonal phase (P6(3)/mmc) at room temperature and the first-order structural-magnetic transition to the orthorhombic phase (Pnma) around 318 K was followed in detail. The MnAs magnetic characterization allowed to obtain the transition temperature and a maximum value of 47 J/(kg.K) for the measured magnetocaloric effect for a magnetic field variation of 5 T

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Cited by 31 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…As can be seen by the changes in the spectra, the transformations occur near T C,i ≈ 42.3 − 43.5C and T C,d = 30 − 32.6 C. Therefore we estimate the thermal irreversibility to be between 10-13.5 C. This hysteresis is somewhat larger than that reported in other works by X-ray and magnetization measurements (10 C) [13][14][15][16][17] . Figure 7 shows magnetization measurements on the same samples with a vibrating sample magnetometer with B = 0.01 T, showing T C,i = 45 C and T C,d = 30.7 C. The abrupt change over 2 C, at ≈ 44 C, when heating (see fig.…”
Section: Nd Set Of Pac Experiments -First-order Transitionmentioning
confidence: 48%
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“…As can be seen by the changes in the spectra, the transformations occur near T C,i ≈ 42.3 − 43.5C and T C,d = 30 − 32.6 C. Therefore we estimate the thermal irreversibility to be between 10-13.5 C. This hysteresis is somewhat larger than that reported in other works by X-ray and magnetization measurements (10 C) [13][14][15][16][17] . Figure 7 shows magnetization measurements on the same samples with a vibrating sample magnetometer with B = 0.01 T, showing T C,i = 45 C and T C,d = 30.7 C. The abrupt change over 2 C, at ≈ 44 C, when heating (see fig.…”
Section: Nd Set Of Pac Experiments -First-order Transitionmentioning
confidence: 48%
“…Thermal hysteresis is measured in this transition: on heating, the hexagonal→orthorhombic phase transformation occurs at temperatures T C,i ≈ 40.5 − 42.5 C, while on cooling this transformation occurs at T C,d ≈ 33.9 − 37.9 C [13][14][15][16][17] (variations in different studies are probably resulting from small differences in the stoichiometry of samples). Phase coexistence in a temperature interval of approximately 2 C is reported by neutron and X-ray diffraction measurements 11,18 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…15 The errors may result from the density and lattice volume change during phase transition from hexagonal to orthorhombic as presentation of first-order transitions. 16,17 However, the values of the entropy change were roughly estimated for the three magnetic fields as references. 15,18 Figure 3(d) shows the entropy changes as a function of temperature for selected applied magnetic fields: 1, 3, and 5 T. The maximum MCE changes were about 150 and 200 J/kgK for the magnetic fields at 3 and 5 T, respectively.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…orthorhombic and hexagonal. [46][47][48][49] As a common feature the compounds with magnetostructural transition often show large thermal and field hysteresis. [49] Unlike for chemical ordering, no restrictions are imposed on magnetic ordering.…”
Section: Magnetic Ordering In Alloysmentioning
confidence: 99%