Magnetization studies and spin Hamiltonian modelling of Li2(Li1-xFex)N
ORAL
Abstract
The study of ferromagnetic materials has yielded many examples of compounds which exhibit large energy barriers to a reversal of magnetization and correspondingly wide magnetization versus field hysteresis loops. Some materials, such as members of the class called ``single-molecule magnets'' (SMMs), even display vivid signatures of quantum tunneling effects, manifested as step-like features in hysteresis loop measurements of crystalline ensembles. The compound Li2(Li1-xFex)N has been previously shown to display an extremely high blocking temperature ($\sim$ 20 K) and large coercive fields (\textgreater 11 T), as well as step-like features like those seen in SMMs [1]. Here we report the results of low-temperature Hall sensor magnetization studies on a crystalline sample of Li2(Li1-0.006Fe0.006)N in which we detail evidence of a preferential orientation for the observed features, as well as their dependence upon transverse component fields in their magnitude, behavior which we attempt to model with a giant spin Hamiltonian. [1] A. Jesche, R.W. McCallum, S. Thimmaiah, J.L. Jacobs, V. Taufour, A. Kreyssig, R.S. Houk, S.L. Bud'ko {\&} P.C. Canfield. Nature Comm., 5, 3333 (2014).
*This work is supported by the US DOE, Basic Energy Sciences under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11358
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