The Ho<sub>6</sub>Mo<sub>4</sub>Al<sub>43</sub> structure type as a cage for Uranium and Plutonium

ORAL

Abstract

Single crystals of A6W4Al43 (A=U/Pu) were synthesized for the first time using a molten Al flux. This structure features large lattice constants (a≈10.97, c≈17.71Å) and cage-like W-Al polyhedra that surround the A ions. XRD suggests that, unlike for some other cage-like structures, the A ions do not exhibit soft lattice modes. Magnetic susceptibility measurements for U6W4Al43 show Curie-Weiss behavior, where fits to the data yield an effective magnetic moment near 2.0 µB/U. At low-T the magnetic susceptibility deviates from the Curie-Weiss law and saturates to a constant value, as seen for other spin fluctuating materials. There is evidence from the electrical transport and heat capacity for the formation of a heavy Fermi liquid ground state due to Kondo lattice behavior. In contrast, Pu6W4Al43 exhibits nearly T-independent Pauli paramagnetism, suggesting delocalization of the 5f electrons. We will discuss these results in the context of the Hill plot, where both compounds are found near the inter-actinide distance that separates delocalized and localized f-electron behavior.

*Work was performed at the NHMFL-FSU, supported by NSF coop. agreements DMR-1157490 and DMR-1644779 and the state of FL. We acknowledge support from US-DOE, BES, under Award No. DE-SC0016568 EFRC-CAST.

Presenters

  • William Nelson

    • Physics, Florida State University

Authors

  • Kevin Huang

    • National High Magnetic Field Lab, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32310
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
    • Florida State University
  • William Nelson

    • Physics, Florida State University
  • Alexander Chemey

    • Chemistry, Florida State University
  • Thomas Albrecht-Schmitt

    • Chemistry, Florida State University
  • Ryan Baumbach

    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University
    • Florida State University
    • NHMFL-FSU
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and Florida State University
    • National High Magnetic Field Laboratory - Florida State University
    • NHMFL