Buschow | Handbook of Magnetic Materials | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, Band 23, 446 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm

Reihe: Handbook of Magnetic Materials

Buschow Handbook of Magnetic Materials

E-Book, Englisch, Band 23, 446 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm

Reihe: Handbook of Magnetic Materials

ISBN: 978-0-444-63538-9
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Technology
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark



Over the last few decades magnetism has seen an enormous expansion into a variety of different areas of research, notably the magnetism of several classes of novel materials that share with truly ferromagnetic materials only the presence of magnetic moments.

Volume 23 of the Handbook of Magnetic Materials, like the preceding volumes, has a dual purpose. With contributions from leading authorities in the field, it includes a variety of self-contained introductions to a given area in the field of magnetism without requiring recourse to the published literature. It is also a reference for scientists active in magnetism research, providing readers with novel trends and achievements in magnetism. In each of these articles an extensive description is given in graphical as well as in tabular form, with much emphasis being placed on the discussion of the experimental material within the framework of physics, chemistry and material science.



- Comprises topical review articles written by leading authorities
- Introduces given topics in the field of magnetism
- Describes novel trends and achievements in magnetism
Buschow Handbook of Magnetic Materials jetzt bestellen!

Zielgruppe


<p>Physicists, chemists and materials scientists, and all scientists active in magnetism research</p>


Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


1. Supermagnetism, Subhankar Bedanta, Oleg Petracic, and Wolfgang Kleemann 2. Non-Fermi Liquid Behavior in Heavy Fermion Systems, Pedro Schlottmann 3. Magnetic and Physical Properties of Cobalt Perovskites, B. Raveau and Md. Motin Seikh 4. Ferrite Materials: Nano to Spintronics Regime, R. K. Kotnala and Jyoti Shah


Preface
K.H.J. Buschow     Van der Waals-Zeeman Institute, University of Amsterdam The Handbook of Magnetic Materials series is a continuation of the Handbook of Ferromagnetic Materials. When Peter Wohlfarth started the latter series, his original aim was to combine new developments in magnetism with the achievements of earlier compilations, producing a worthy successor to Bozorth's classical and monumental book Ferromagnetism. This is the main reason that Ferromagnetic Materials was initially chosen as title for the handbook series although the latter aimed at giving a more complete cross-section of magnetism than Bozorth's book. In the last few decades, magnetism has seen an enormous expansion into a variety of different areas of research, comprising the magnetism of several classes of novel materials that share with truly ferromagnetic materials only the presence of magnetic moments. For this reason, the editor and the publisher carefully reconsidered the title of the series and changed it to the Handbook of Magnetic Materials. It is with much pleasure that I now introduce Volume 23. Chapter 1 of this volume deals with supermagnetism. The advent of nanoscale materials has led to important improvements in materials properties and to new aspects in the understanding of matter in various fields of physics, chemistry and material science. Of particular interest are the achievements reached with magnetic nanoscale materials. Here it should be mentioned that the synthesis of magnetic nanomaterials has been a challenge in its own right, where many advances have been reached in the last two decades. Hand in hand with these advances in synthesis methods, a much better understanding of the electrical, magnetic, optical, and mechanical properties was reached that in turn made it possible that novel experimental techniques have been developed, leading to a much better characterization of nanoscale materials. It appeared that finite size effects, surface effects, and interparticle interactions are the main issues that dominate the magnetic properties of magnetic nanoparticles. The much reduced particle size is responsible for the so-called quantum confinement to able to control the nanoscale properties to a large extent. By contrast, surface effects result in symmetry breaking of the crystal structure at the nanoparticles' boundaries. Numerous review articles have been published in the past few decades dealing with the synthesis, properties, and applications of magnetic nanoparticles. Here the magnetic properties of nanoparticle assemblies of variant concentrations are reviewed. There is a discussion on how interparticle interactions of different strengths give rise to a variety of magnetic states such as superparamagnetism, superspin glass behavior, and superferromagnetism, which together form the field of supermagnetism. The review highlights the most important developments in the field. After introducing the basic magnetic properties of single domain nanoparticles, their mutual interactions and specific characterization methods are outlined. The types of different supermagnetic states mentioned are discussed with much attention being paid to the behavior of discontinuous metal-insulator multilayers as being universally representative. Superspin glass systems show all of the characteristic glassy properties including frustration, non-ergodicity and aging. Superferromagnetic domains in a non-percolated nanoparticle assembly are comparable to conventional ones in a continuous ferromagnetic film with the decisive difference that the atomic spins are replaced by the superspins of the single-domain nanoparticles. Correlated granular ferromagnets and self-assembled magnetic supracrystals also show various supermagnetic states depending on their superstructure and composition and may offer a wide application potential as multifunctional nanoparticle materials. At the end of this Chapter the current state of understanding is highlighted and some challenges in this field are mentioned that need to be addressed in the future. In Chapter 2 a comprehensive review is given of non-Fermi liquid behavior in heavy fermion systems. Over many decades the Landau Fermi liquid theory has successfully been employed in explaining the low-energy behavior of most common metallic systems. At low temperatures this Fermi liquid behavior can be characterized by a linear temperature dependence of the specific heat with a renormalized specific-heat coefficient, by a generally weakly temperature-dependent but enhanced magnetic susceptibility and by an electrical resistivity consisting of a constant term and a term that increases quadratically in T. In the last few decades numerous U, Ce and Yb based heavy fermion systems have been reported to show deviations from Fermi liquid behavior. These deviations have been indicated as non-Fermi liquid behavior and often display a log(T)-dependence in the specific heat when plotted over T, a singular behavior of the magnetic susceptibility, and a resistivity showing a power-law dependence in T. In numerous investigations the breakdown of the Fermi liquid behavior was studied in systems where it was reached by varying the chemical pressure in alloys via element substitution or by changing the hydrostatic pressure or the magnetic field. These systems are often close to the onset of antiferromagnetism and the non-Fermi liquid behavior is considered to be due to the presence of a quantum critical point, although the latter point itself is experimentally elusive because it occurs at T = 0. A review of the experimental and theoretical studies dealing with this interesting class of materials is presented here. First fundamental aspects of Landau's phenomenological theory are briefly reviewed, followed by a presentation of the microscopic origin of heavy electrons through the Kondo and Anderson lattices. It is discussed how in terms of Doniach's picture the competition of the Kondo effect with the Ruderman–Kittel–Kasuya–Yosida interaction leads to a magnetically ordered phase and a Fermi liquid phase separated by a quantum critical point, the instability of the Fermi liquid being the origin of the non-Fermi liquid behavior. It is stressed that quantum critical points and non-Fermi liquid behavior can be viewed as a natural occurrence in low-dimensional critical phenomena. The discussion includes several examples such as the multichannel Kondo model, Luttinger liquids, the anisotropic Heisenberg chain, and long-range order in two dimensions. Also disorder driven quantum criticality is briefly addressed and the results are analyzed for a microscopic model for quantum criticality due to nested Fermi surfaces. Chapter 3 reviews the magnetic and physical properties of cobalt perovskites. The cobalt oxides with the perovskite structure form a large group of exciting materials. They have been the subject of many studies because this group harbors a plethora of complex compositional, structural, magnetic, and electrical-transport properties. To date there are still many ongoing studies, many of which deal with controversial aspects. It interesting to note that apart from the cobalt perovskites there exist an equally interesting group of structurally related materials formed by the manganite perovskites, materials for which the physics is notably different. The properties of these manganite perovskites have been reviewed in Volume 22 of this handbook. The extraordinary rich physics of cobalt perovskites is strongly related to their specific crystal chemistry which in turn originates from the electronic properties of cobalt. This transition metal component can be present in different oxidation states such as Co2+, Co3+, Co4+. This opens the possibility of the formation of a large variety of different coordinations, including those of tetrahedral, octahedral, square pyramidal, trigonal bipyramidal symmetry. The upshot is that mixed-valency perovskites can be formed in which oxygen deficiency plays an important role. This oxygen deficiency, in turn, can give rise to the interesting phenomenon of ordering–disordering of oxygen vacancies in non-stoichiometric compounds. All these features can occur to different degrees in the various cobalt perovskites, depending strongly on the nature of the third component (such as for instance rare earths or alkaline earths) in these mixed oxide materials. An additional feature arises from the crystal field splitting of the 3D orbitals of the Co atoms. This leads to triply degenerate t2g levels and doubly degenerate eg levels. Depending on the oxidation state of the Co atoms, these states are increasingly occupied with electrons when moving in the sequence Co4+, Co3+, Co2+. As a consequence, various spin states may develop, including high spin (S = 3/2), intermediate spin (S = 1), and low spin (S = 1/2). Which of these spin states is reached depends on how the degree of occupation of the t2g levels and eg levels is realized, which can be influenced by various external circumstances. This opens the possibility of spin state transitions brought about for instance by varying the temperature, the pressure or the magnetic field. Needless to say, this can have serious consequences for the magnetic and transport properties. As follows from the above, there is an enormous wealth of physical phenomena observed experimentally in the various types of perovskites as reviewed here. In this chapter the authors have concentrated on the stoichiometric perovskites of the types LnCoO3 and Ln1-xAxCoO3, where cobalt is only...


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