Evidence of a new magnetic anomaly below the ferromagnetic Curie temperature in highly ordered La<sub>2</sub>CoMnO<sub>6</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Bulk double perovskite La2CoMnO6 (LCMO) is an insulating ferromagnet with Curie temperature (TC) of 225 K. The monoclinic P21 /n phase of LCMO was synthesized using sol-gel technique. Temperature dependence of magnetization showed two distinct transitions at 226 and 218 K corresponding to Mn4+–O–Co2+ ferromagnetic (FM) superexchange (TC ~226 K) and Co2+–O–Co2+ antiferromagnetic (AFM) interactions, respectively. A relatively high value of TC and µeff ~ 7.51 µB confirm the highly ordered state of Co and Mn ions. Interestingly, AC measurements indicate the presence of two additional transitions: a frequency dependent peak at 135 K which signifies a spin-glass-like state and an anomaly at ~40 K due to low-temperature Mn4+–O–Mn4+ AFM interactions. A careful examination of the temperature and field dependence of magnetic entropy change (ΔSM), calculated via the magnetocaloric effect, supports the above findings. Specifically, our results indicate the presence of a low-field AFM phase (218 K) just below the ferromagnetic transition (226 K) that is suppressed at a critical field, which has not been previously reported.

*Research was supported by the U.S. Department Of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering under Award No. DE-FG02-07ER46438.

Presenters

  • Richa Pokharel Madhogaria

    • Univ of South Florida

Authors

  • Richa Pokharel Madhogaria

    • Univ of South Florida
  • Raja Das

    • Applied Physics, University of South Florida
    • Univ of South Florida
    • Physics, Univ of South Florida
  • Eleanor Clements

    • Univ of South Florida
  • Manh-Huong Phan

    • Applied Physics, University of South Florida
    • Univ of South Florida
    • Physics, Univ of South Florida
  • Hariharan Srikanth

    • Applied Physics, University of South Florida
    • Univ of South Florida
    • Physics Department, University of South Florida
    • Physics, Univ of South Florida